Lot  624 Ravenel Autumn Auction 2025 Taipei

Ravenel Autumn Auction 2025 Taipei

Tao-Te Ching in Cursive Script

PU TZU (Bu Zi) (Taiwanese, 1959 - 2013)

2005

Ink on paper, scroll

180 x 95 cm

Estimate

TWD 80,000-160,000

HKD 21,000-41,000

USD 2,600-5,300

CNY 19,000-37,000

Sold Price


Signature

Signed PU Tzu in Chinese
With two seals of the artist

EXHIBITED
"The Cold Flowers Grew in Old Cliffs: Buzi Art Collection Exhibition", National Dr. Sun Yat-Sen Memorial Hall, Taipei, 29 December, 2022-11 January, 2023

ILLUSTRATED
The Prominent Categories of Taiwanese Art, General Association of Chinese Culture, Taipei, 2006, p. 103
The Cold Flowers Grew in Old Cliffs: Buzi Art Collection Exhibition, Ease Art, New Taipei City, 2022, pp. 120-121

+ OVERVIEW

This work presents PU Tzu’s transcription of Laozi’s Daodejing. The Daodejing draws upon everyday phenomena to illuminate the wisdom of “non-action, yet nothing is left undone.” Though concise in length, its philosophy is profoundly far-reaching. The text has been transcribed since as early as the Western Han, as evidenced by manuscripts unearthed from the Mawangdui tombs, and has continued to be copied throughout successive dynasties.
PU Tzu is not only a calligrapher but also a seeker of spiritual wisdom and enlightenment. He has long practiced meditation, mindfulness, and sutra transcription. His writings of the Amitabha Sutra, the Heart Sutra, and the Diamond Sutra are particularly admired. The Daodejing, with its poetic cadence and natural simplicity, resonated deeply with PU Tzu and therefore frequently appears in his works.
PU Tzu is best known for his large-scale wild cursive. In such calligraphy, writing transcends its function as a mere vehicle of information to become an outpouring of the calligrapher’s emotions. By contrast, the present piece reveals another dimension of his cursive practice. While it shares the fluid and swift brushwork characteristic of cursive script, it takes the form of modern cursive (jincao), in which legibility is preserved. This allows the viewer to engage in a direct reading of the classic text.
The entire work flows with ease and grace, its lines elegant and fluid. Though the characters vary in size and the ink tones in intensity, the rhythmic energy remains coherent and continuous, embodying a sense of “freedom within restraint.” In contrast to PU Tzu’s wild cursive as a stage for personal expression, this work invites the viewer to progress alongside the artist—enjoying the quiet rhythm with the Daodejing’s philosophy of nature and principle.
Related Info

Refined Brushwork:Ink Paintings & Works of Art

Ravenel Autumn Auction 2025 Taipei

Saturday, November 29, 2025, 3:00pm