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In April 2000, at Christie's auction in Hong Kong, the bronze statue of the monkey head was sold for 25 times at a price of 8185,000 Hong Kong dollars, and the bronze statue of the bull head was sold for 2/kloc-0 times at a price of 7,745,000 Hong Kong dollars. At Sotheby's auction in Hong Kong in May of the same year, the bronze statue of Tiger Head was sold for 265,438+0 times at a price of HK$ 65,445,000.
The bronze statues of the pig's head and the horse's head in the Chinese zodiac were auctioned in new york and London in 1987 and 1989 respectively, and are now in the United States and Taiwan Province Province. Later, it was bought by Stanley Ho, an entrepreneur of Macao Special Administrative Region, from American collectors for more than HK$ 6 million and donated to Poly Art Museum in September 2003. The bronze statue of Horsehead auctioned by Sotheby's auction house in Hong Kong has been valued at over HK$ 60 million, nearly twice the total price of the previous four bronze statues of the Chinese zodiac.
Bull's head, tiger's head and monkey's head were purchased by China Poly Group in 2000 at a cost of HK$ 30 million and collected in Beijing Poly Museum.
The bronze statues of rabbit head and mouse head were collected by a French collector;
Sheep head, dragon head, snake head and chicken head have not been seen since 1900 Yuanmingyuan was looted.
On September 17, 2003, Zhenguan International Auction (Hong Kong) Co., Ltd. decided to cancel the auction of China's national treasures and dog heads scheduled for June 5438126.