Latest News Articles by Roland Arkell

img_22-1.jpg

Sèvres plate puts on a display of French chivalry

14 April 2025

Created shortly after the 1830 Revolution, when Louis Philippe ruled as ‘king of the French’, the ‘Service de la Chevalerie’ was a great example of romantic historicism.

img_36-1.jpg

Print purchaser was active in ‘Golden Age’ of collecting

14 April 2025

Swedish civil engineer and army officer with great understanding bought the best impressions available

img_14-1.jpg

Cotswolds School lessons in style

12 April 2025

The Art Deco design movement found a unique expression in Cotswolds School furniture - one that sought to blend clean lines with traditional English materials and craftsmanship.

Saint Agnes by Segna di Bonaventura

Sienese gold ground paintings spotlighted in Christie’s private sales exhibition

11 April 2025

Christie’s private sales department is holding a selling exhibition titled Siena and the Renaissance.

img_30-1.jpg

Previews: issue 2688

07 April 2025

Our selection of lots from 14 upcoming auctions

img_4-3.jpg

Elizabeth I gold Sovereign strikes £75,000

07 April 2025

Held by the same Dutch family for just over 300 years, a very high-grade Elizabeth I gold Sovereign sold for £75,000 at London coin specialist Sovereign Rarities’ auction on March 13.

Robert Burns by Sir Henry Raeburn

Lost Raeburn portrait of Robert Burns emerges

07 April 2025

A hitherto lost portrait of Robert Burns by Sir Henry Raeburn has sold for 136-times top estimate at auction in south London. Modestly guided at just £300-500, it hammered for £68,000 at Wimbledon Auctions on March 31. Raeburn (1756-1823) never painted Scotland’s national poet from life.

img_13-5.jpg

Murphy’s Falcon Studio produced fine silver

07 April 2025

These two silver lots bear the mark of Henry George Murphy (1884-1939), whose Falcon Studio produced some of the finest English silver of the inter-war era.

img_13-1.jpg

Designer Elmer wheels into view with a Carlton Ware vase

07 April 2025

Only a decade ago Carlton Ware designer Violet Elmer (1907-88) was a relative unknown compared with her contemporaries Clarice Cliff, Susie Cooper and Charlotte Rhead.

img_20-1.jpg

Rings gave miners a memento of the Australian gold rush

07 April 2025

Among the earliest examples of Australian gold rush jewellery are the simple signet rings sold to miners in the settlement of Ballarat in the 1850s as a memento of the boomtown days.

img_14-4.jpg

Isokon and Summers paved the way for Modernism

07 April 2025

The London-based design company Isokon, which produced furniture by Wells Coates and Marcel Breuer, and Gerald Summers’ firm Makers of Simple Furniture both explored the radical possibilities of lamination.

img_15-2.jpg

Listeners cried out for cheaper radios amid economic turmoil

07 April 2025

As the Depression took hold, the clamour for luxury goods in tropical hardwoods, silver and shagreen was replaced by a demand for less expensive consumer goods that combined the modern aesthetic with new materials and industrial production.

Trump tariffs throw art trade into confusion

07 April 2025

The ‘Liberation Day’ trade tariffs announced by US President Donald Trump have thrown the global art and antiques trade into disarray.

img_13-2.jpg

Slater Shelley creations gave cause to ‘stop and think’

07 April 2025

Shelley produced the geometric Vogue and Mode shape tea and coffee wares between 1930-32 - both the designs of Eric Slater (1902-84) who had worked at the factory since the end of the First World War.

img_6-1.jpg

Louvre steps in to secure French flatware made for George III

07 April 2025

Flatware from a French silver dinner service made for George III was pre-empted by the Louvre Museum at auction in Paris.

img_13-3.jpg

Minimalistic Murray made simple but striking forms

07 April 2025

New Zealand-born architect Keith Murray (1892-1981) began to make designs for Wedgwood on a commercial basis in 1933, joining a stable of designers that included Daisy Makeig-Jones and John Skeaping.

img_12-2.jpg

A special look at the British design side of the Art Deco market a century after the movement began

07 April 2025

With this year marking the 100th anninversary of the exhibition that gave Art Deco its name, we report on the British designers whose creations appear on the market

img_8-1.jpg

Pick of the Week: Jamaican views trump European

07 April 2025

The Fine Sale on March 26 at Cheffins in Cambridge included a group of pictures consigned by a descendant of the artist known as Philip Villamil of Jamaica (1814-78).

img_9-7.jpg

English delft features in Slater collection sale

07 April 2025

Graham Slater (1927-2024) was fascinated by relics of Stuart and Georgian Britain. His wife Rosemary shared his passions, including his love of mudlarking, exploring the banks of the Thames for fragments washed up by each new tide.

img_5-2.jpg

Brontë Parsonage buys Emily’s painting

07 April 2025

The Brontë Parsonage was the successful bidder at £32,000 (plus premium) when an original watercolour drawing by Emily Brontë came for sale in London.