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China's ‘lost’ sexual past is laid bare in Sotheby's erotic art exhibit

Dutch collector says China's philosophy-based sexual thinking disappeared during Cultural Revolution

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A figure of a naked woman on display at the "Gardens of pleasure: sex in ancient China" show in Hong Kong. Photo: Nora Tam

Ancient paintings of fornicating Chinese couples and phalluses made of stone are among items that Dutch art collector Ferdinand Bertholet hopes will help China reconnect with its sexually charged past.

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Explicit works spanning from the Han dynasty (206BC - AD220) to the Qing dynasty (1644-1911) are among more than 100 pieces on display in Hong Kong, drawing surprise and giggles from some viewers unaware of the country’s ancient relationship with sex.

Watch: Erotic art offers glimpse of China's 'lost' sexual philosophy

In one painting, two women share a very intimate moment with a phallus, while other items at the “Gardens of Pleasure” exhibition organised by Sotheby’s includes penis-shaped objects made from stone, ceramics and bronze.

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Bertholet, whose collection of Chinese erotic art is the world’s largest with around 500 pieces, said such explicitness should not be considered crude or pornographic, instead representing harmony with the Taoist philosophy that thrived in China before communist rule and the chaos of the Cultural Revolution.

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