Features


img_18-7.jpg

Review of the year 2019: July

16 December 2019

Hot topics in July included the 'furniture deal of the year', the Antiquities Dealers’ Association warning that dealers and auctioneers should stand up to “the politicisation of the antiquities trade” and a saleroom shutting down.

img_19-1.jpg

Review of the year 2019: August

16 December 2019

While gold prices hitting an all-time high and an art adviser being sentenced to 12 years for fraud were big moments in August, another notable bit of news was Woolley & Wallis chairman Paul Viney stepping down.

img_14-6.jpg

Review of the year 2019: March

16 December 2019

In March UK’s art market reclaimed its second position in the global league table, while new discoveries of Constable sketches and a number of auction houses opening new businesses or locations in London were among the developments.

img_23-2.jpg

Review of the year 2019: December

16 December 2019

Two rare panels created by a Sienese artist featuring St Clare caught the eye when they sold at a December auction, while a sale offering items from a name synonymous with British studio pottery was also a stand-out.

img_13-1.jpg

Review of the year 2019: February

16 December 2019

Rising buyer's premiums, change at The Fine Art Society and Masterpiece in Hong Kong being affected by the wave of protests were among the topics making headlines in February.

img_16-3.jpg

Review of the year 2019: May

16 December 2019

The headlines in May included a ram raid at the Petworth fair, John Sandon calling it a day after 43 years as the director of British ceramics at Bonhams and two auction house relaunches.

img_12-5.jpg

Review of the year 2019: January

16 December 2019

The big issues in January included early discussions on Brexit red tape, the end of a 10-year tussle over Artist’s Resale Right in France and the ABA turning to Biblio for fair sponsorship after protests about Amazon-owned AbeBooks.

img_15-1.jpg

Review of the year 2019: April

16 December 2019

A new ABA president was appointed and a BADA president resigned in April, while fresh EU cultural goods rules and a prolific pensioner art thief sentenced to jail were among the other events making the news.

img_17-6.jpg

Review of the year 2019: June

16 December 2019

Sotheby's going into private ownership was a big bit of news in June, while book and map fairs teaming up to run across four days and the 'Toulouse Caravaggio' also caught the attention.

img_27-1.jpg

Vintage comics that make the cut

09 December 2019

Cutting up examples for new artworks can be controversial – but here is a case for the defence

img_14-1.jpg

A little box of Sunshine

16 November 2019

For more than 25 years a regular contributor to BBC’s Antiques Roadshow, John Benjamin recalls his early days in the trade – while reviewing a recent jewellery auction. Additional reporting by Roland Arkell.

img_15-9.jpg

Oved’s animal magic

11 November 2019

It was not catalogued as such, but this silver ring modelled as a standing lion with a gold-coloured mane is designed by Moshe Oved (1885-1958), the owner of celebrated Bloomsbury antique shop Cameo Corner where jewellery expert John Benjamin first learnt his trade.

img_16-4.jpg

The sign of the Knights Templar

11 November 2019

This early medieval gold ring dates to the time of the Crusades – its decoration of a five-fold ‘Jerusalem’ cross suggesting a link with the Knights Templar.

img_23-3.jpg

The Speedy before space

11 November 2019

The Watch Sale at Fellows in Birmingham on November 26 includes this Ref 105.002-62 Omega Speedmaster chronograph.

img_18-6.jpg

Sprinkling a little stardust

11 November 2019

The 1961 International Exhibition of Modern Jewellery, organised jointly by the Worshipful Company of Goldsmiths and the Victoria and Albert Museum, was the world’s first international display of contemporary jewellery.

img_15-8.jpg

The cutting edge of fashion

11 November 2019

Out of favour for a generation, grand tour and ancient intaglios and cameos are enjoying a return to form.

img_22-6.jpg

When two into one does go

11 November 2019

Of the more than 200 jewellery lots for sale at Dawson’s (23% buyer’s premium) in Maidenhead on October 26, a 15ct gold double bracelet (below) displaying Victorian engineering ingenuity was among the most contested.

img_18-4.jpg

Mappin’s entry to Modern Jewellery

11 November 2019

A letter accompanying this gold, diamond and fire opal brooch, formed as a columbine, below, confirms it was part of the International Exhibition of Modern Jewellery held at The Goldsmiths Hall, London, in 1961.

img_22-5.jpg

A double helping of imperial jewels

11 November 2019

Jewellery owned by Marie Valerie Hapsburg, the favourite daughter of Empress Elisabeth of Austria, will be auctioned by Dorotheum in Vienna on November 27.

img_18-1.jpg

Shedding daylight on Art Nouveau

11 November 2019

The November 18 sale titled California Jewelry held by Doyle New York on the West Coast includes a group of French Art Nouveau pieces described as ‘Property from an Important Jewel Collector’. Several display the plique-à-jour (‘letting in daylight’) enamelling technique revived in the late 19th century.

News

Categories