Nov 28, 2017
A good strong sale with two particular Lots flying out the door. Lots 136 & 256 did very well.. the first Lot 136 sold on the phone. Alonzo C Webb (1888-1975) American. An American City Skyline, possibly Chicago, mixed media, signed and dated 1950, 20” x 26”. Estimated at £400-£600, it fetched £3200. Lot 256 attributed to George Mullins (act.1756-1775) Irish. Study of an Old Man, seated in a Landscape, oil on canvas laid down, signed and dated ‘AD 1772’, Unframed, 26” x 20”. Estimated at £150-£250, it also went for £3200 to an internet buyer.
The next Paintings auction will be 20th December. Keep an eye on our website for further details.

Nov 20, 2017
On November 25, 1952 what has since become the world’s longest continuously running play in history opened for the first time at The Ambassadors Theatre in London’s West End. The world premiere of Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap had taken place just over seven weeks earlier in Nottingham, but it was at The Ambassadors and then, from March 25, 1974, next door at The St Martin’s Theatre, where it continues to this day, that the play has enjoyed it unbroken run.
The production’s first star was Richard Attenborough, whose contractual arrangements meant that the programme billed him as appearing “By arrangement with the Boulting Brothers”, the successful duo who had discovered him and helped make his name in the 1948 film version of Graham Greene’s Brighton Rock and would continue to put him on the screen for the next decade.
The programme also promoted other theatrical productions, including Vivien Leigh and Laurence Olivier in The Sleeping Prince at the Phoenix Theatre and Trevor Howard in The Cherry Orchard at The Lyric, Hammersmith – Halcyon days for theatre indeed!
Occasionally one of these rare debut programmes comes onto the market. The original price was sixpence, or 2½p in new money. Now it is a very achievable £10 or so – still, a reasonable uplift of 40,000% over the intervening 65 years.
Nov 17, 2017
The Fine Antique auction on the 9 November saw some good results with some surprises. A good set of three lead garden figures, modelled as cherubs emblematic of earth, wind and water, on circular bases. Estimated at £500-700, they fetched £1100.
Estimated at £500-600, the ever popular Clarice Cliff bizarre “forest green” tea set, teapot and cover, milk jug, sugar basin and two cups and saucers went for £1100. A standing bronze from Sir William Hamo Thornycroft RA (1850-1925) British , 129 baluchis, wearing his medals, holding a rifle with bayonet in front of him sold for £5500 with an estimate of £2000-3000.
The clock section did well with a superb rare Moser of Paris brass carriage clock, with eight-day movement, triple dial with month and days, striking on a single bell, stamped Moser A. Paris, no. 9483, stamped on the movement and case, complete with carrying handle. Carrying an estimate of £600-800, it went for £1100. Also, a superb French 19th century gold, diamond and blue enamel bangle, made in France circa. 1890 and estimated at £500-800, sold for £1400.
A rare set of four early Dutch silver candlesticks, estimated at £2500-3000 sold for £3800.
More unusual was an early Fijian whale tooth necklace. Estimated at £500-700, it sold for £1300.
We will be running an auction of collectors’ items on 2 December. Please see the catalogue on our website nearer to the sale.

Nov 17, 2017
The recent Oriental sale in November saw items selling well. A 19th century framed Chinese kingfisher feather river landscape picture, the frame 33in x 25.5in sold for £4000.
Also, a Chinese famille rose porcelain butterfly vase, the base with a qianlong seal mark, 7.25in wide at widest point & 9.2in high sold for £3000. A good quality Chinese celadon glazed porcelain jar, the base with a yongzheng seal mark, 8.4in wide at widest point & 8.1in high sold for £30. An unusual Chinese yellow glazed oval porcelain bowl & cover, the base with a qianlong seal mark, 10.75in wide including handles & 9.75in high overall sold for £4000. A shallow Chinese jun ware ceramic tripod censer, 5.4in diameter at rim & 1.6in high sold for £2400. A good large 18th/19th century Chinese langyao type porcelain vase, 16.7in high sold for £4000.
From the Japanese selection, an unusual meiji period ivory okimono of a seated woman with a child, possibly Tokyo school, 7.75in high sold for £2000.
The next Oriental sale will be 13 December. Do please keep an eye on our website for the catalogue.

Nov 13, 2017
One of my favourite news stories of the past week concerned the discovery, after 128 years, of the remains of a grasshopper, which had been trapped in the paint of Vincent Van Gogh’s 1889 picture Olive Trees.
Rather like those gorgeous pieces of amber you occasionally see at auction, which trapped unrecognisable insects sometimes hundreds of millions of years ago as tree sap before fossilising, the discovery creates a seemingly direct link to a specific moment in time, compressing the years in between so that you can almost see and hear Vincent slapping the paint onto the canvas.
These direct connections are what many people look for when buying things at auction and explain the huge price differences between artworks described in the catalogue as ‘follower of’ (someone unidentified working in the style of a well-known artist at around the same time), ‘school of’ (a work of the time in the style of the artist), ‘studio of’ (a work from the artist’s studio or closely associated with them), ‘attributed to’ (probably, but not certainly, by the artist) and ‘autograph work’ (categorically by the artist).
In the art world, there is nothing quite like being close enough to touch the hand of the creator.