Chinese authorities say their investigation of a high-profile scandal in one of the country’s leading state-run museums has revealed there was systemic mismanagement and alleged corruption decades ago that allowed national treasures to be funnelled into the private art market.The scandal unfolded in late December when Nanjing Museum in eastern Jiangsu province was alleged to have secretly sold donated paintings after the artworks were mishandled by a former director.The controversy centres on five paintings among a 137-piece collection donated by the family of collector Pang Laichen in 1959 with the intention of being preserved within the museum, yet they were found to be missing during a court-ordered inventory check filed by Pang’s descendants.Detail from Spring in Jiangnan by Qiu Ying. Photo: The PaperEarlier last year, one of the works, the renowned Ming dynasty painting Spring in Jiangnan by Qiu Ying, appeared for auction to be sold for an estimated 88 million yuan (US$12.7 million), prompting Pang’s great-granddaughter, Pang Shuling, to report the case to the authorities and ask the museum to provide documentation about the treatment of the artwork. The painting was withdrawn from sale after protests by the family.The controversy gained national headlines in December and sparked public mistrust in museum management at a time when Beijing is trying to promote the country as a cultural superpower. National and provincial authorities sent teams to investigate.The months-long probe – which involved more than 1,100 interviews and the review of 65,000 archival documents – found that some of the five works in question were illegally transferred, sold or lost over the decades, according to a report released by Jiangsu provincial authorities under the guidance of the National Cultural Heritage Administration on Monday evening.The investigation found that in the 1990s Xu Huping, then the museum’s vice-director, violated procedures to approve the transfer of the five donated paintings to the state-owned Jiangsu provincial cultural relics store for sale.
Chinese probe into Nanjing Museum scandal alleges historic mismanagement and corruption
South China Morning PostEN 2 min read 75% complete by Xinlu LiangFebruary 10, 2026 at 09:00 AM

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museum scandal 90% nanjing museum 90% corruption 80% investigation 70% donated paintings 70% mismanagement 70% artworks 60% art market 60% cultural heritage 50% cultural relics 50%
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