Among the lots in Christie’s antiquities sale in New York on October 28 is a Greek gold oak […]
Author: Learn Antiques Team
Purchased for £1 from a Hertfordshire charity shop earlier this year, a Qianlong famille rose wall vase will […]
Lyon & Turnbull’s African & Oceanic Art & Antiquities auction in Edinburgh on October 16 includes this Apulian-Corinthian […]
The term ‘duty dodgers’ is applied to pieces that were not sent for assay during the period 1720-58 […]
Featuring in Dix Noonan Webb’s Jewellery, Watches, Antiquities & Objects of Vertu sale in London on September 10 […]
A 1538 Coverdale New Testament was one of the high spots of a 39-lot section of books from […]
This Korean gilt bronze figure of the deity Chijang Bosal or Ksitigarbha is dated to the Goryeo dynasty […]
Bowl and chicken cup impress in Suffolk and Berkshire salerooms. Extracted from Antiques Trade Gazette | Terence Ryle […]
This copper-alloy Roman mask will be offered for sale on September 3 by TimeLine Auctions in London, estimated […]
Georgia O’Keeffe was recognised as one of America’s most significant artists with her works commanding high prices. She was a prolific artist who produced about 2000 pieces of art. She influenced early American modernists as a part of the Stieglitz Circle. Flowers were a consistent motif in O’Keeffe’s work. And despite her renunciation of their interpretation of her works, she was also a great influence on the artists of the feminist movement. The deterioration of her health did not mar her will to create. At seventy-three, her work featured more of rivers and clouds in the skies. O’Keeffe’s legacy included 70 years of work and contributions to American modernism’s development.
Useful buys if you want to know how to ‘pott a Swan’, ‘fry Harticholk’ or even ‘stew Lettice’ […]
In stark contrast to the elegant dolls’ houses which took the higher bids at a recent auction (ATG […]
Highlights at Roseberys (25% buyer’s premium) brought more than the usual sense of trans-centuries time travel experienced at […]
The name Marklin always suggested an O gauge loco and tender offered at Tennants (20% buyer’s premium) would […]
Richard Sebright worked for the Royal Worcester company for fifty-six years. However, there is little information about the man himself. His work and his religion completely occupied his days. Every piece he worked on had to be the very best he was capable of. But because of this, he was never fast enough to make a good living. Yet, his fellow artists considered him to be the finest fruit painter of them all. When you look at his works, it is easy to understand why. Richard is remembered for his exceptionally fine fruit paintings, and also for his delicate watercolours of flowers.
Better by a distance than nine similar items, a mid-17th century wainscot chair offered by Lawrences (25% buyer’s […]
Drawing keen interest at Hansons (20% buyer’s premium) in Derbyshire last month was a work by Belgian painter […]
Relatively few English spinets from the 17th century survive but one surfaced at a Criterion auction in Islington. […]