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£53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase

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Post by dblboggie Fri Nov 12, 2010 7:17 pm


Talk about hitting the jackpot!!!



How £53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase in a semi and insured for just £800


By [url=http://www.dailymail.co.uk/home/search.html?s=y&authornamef=Paul Harris]Paul Harris[/url]Last updated at 11:27 PM on 12th November 2010

He kept it rather precariously on top of a bookcase in the living room – an elegant Chinese vase with a fish motif on the front and gold banding that glistened occasionally in the sunlight.

One nudge could have sent it crashing to the ground at any time over the last several decades. But it wouldn’t have been a disaster. The ornate porcelain ornament would have been worth an impressive £800 on the insurance.
That, at least, was the theory – and it might have stayed that way had the vase not caught the eye of an expert after a modest semi in Pinner, West London, was cleared in the wake of the owner’s death.

£53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase Article-1328904-0C077E3B000005DC-736_634x862
Masterpiece: After casually sitting in a Middlesex home for decades, this 18th century Chinese vase last night sold for a record £51.6million



Enlarge £53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase Article-1328904-0C0785B6000005DC-120_306x301
£53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase Article-1328904-0C07863A000005DC-296_306x301


Rare: The elaborately-decorated 18th century vase was found during a routine clear-out. The family who lived in the house had no idea of its value




What the art world now knows is that the 16-inch tall vase is the most expensive piece of Chinese porcelain ever to come on to the market – creating a whirlwind of excitement after it was sold at auction on Thursday for £53.1million.

It was described variously as ‘a masterpiece’, ‘exquisite’ and a world record discovery that became ‘the antiques story of the 21st century’.

So yesterday the riddle of how it journeyed from an 18th century royal palace in Beijing to a lounge in the suburbs became a Chinese puzzle that had historians and art experts across the globe scratching their heads in disbelief.

Today the Daily Mail can reveal that the vase belonged to an elderly man who inherited it from his uncle, an explorer who travelled frequently to the Far East. When the man died this year it was left as part of his estate to his sister, in her seventies, and her married son, in his forties.

£53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase Article-0-0C0BDDAB000005DC-392_306x309
Detail: The exceptional finishing on the 1740s vase

At a chaotic, crowded sale on Thursday night, they watched in disbelief as frantic bidding changed their fortunes in a matter of minutes. Bidding suddenly rocketed from£500,000 to tens of millions.

Last night the pair were virtually in hiding after their lottery-style win, pleading with the auction house to honour a promise that their identities would not be revealed.

That left interested parties from around the world scrambling for detail about the provenance of an artwork which, it emerged yesterday, was the most expensive item of Asian art ever sold, as well as the world’s priciest object d’art, excluding paintings and bronze sculpture.

Today it forms the centrepiece of a tale that involves an auction house more used to selling £500 mahogany armchairs than something which reaps an £8.6million commission (not including VAT); a breathtakingly inaccurate estimate of what it might fetch; and a gloriously comic Del Boy moment when – just like the auction scene in one Only Fools And Horses Christmas special – the son had to go outside ‘for a breath of fresh air’ when it became clear they had been unwittingly sitting on a fortune.

Yesterday Pinner was swarming with journalists and TV camera teams trying to track down any tiny clue to the provenance of the 1740 Qianlong dynasty piece.

The Mail has discovered that the explorer uncle spent the inter-war years of the 1920s and 1930stravelling the world and left it to the family with a remarkable collection of mementoes, maps, antique travel books and ornaments.

The vase, fired in the Imperial kilns and marked with the Imperial seal, was made for the Emperor by a master craftsman. It is thought to have left its rightful royal home towards the end of the 19th century, in a period of widespread looting and theft. By the 1930s, however, China was going through a depression and great change.

So the question is, did the explorer unwittingly buy it for a pittance from a dodgy dealer in Beijing? Or was it a gift from some colonial type who didn’t know its true value?

That part of the chronology may never now be determined. As the auctioneers themselves put it: ‘If only the vase could speak.’

Hence, the modern-day chapter of this story unfolds not in China, but 5,000 miles away in Pinner. The area does have an association with Ming and Qianlong but they are take-aways, not dynasties.


£53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase Article-1328904-0C0A9193000005DC-998_634x419
Hammer time: Auctioneer Peter Bainbridge holds up the gavel that broke during Thursday night's sale

So it was to Ruislip that the late owner’s family looked when they were arranging to clear the house,believed to have been a semi-detached bungalow.

How fortunate for Bainbridge’s Auctions and house-clearance services that they happened to have put a flyer through the letterbox of the dead chap’s sister, who lives nearby. In September she received a visit from sale room manager David Reay.

At this stage, incidentally, lawyers had valued the vase for probate purposes at just £800. Remarkably, with hindsight, the family wondered if the bookcase on which it stood was more valuable (in fact it sold later for just £200 with other personal effects totalling £7,000).

But one item, sitting on a plastic shelf at Bainbridge’s when their consultant valuer came in, had been removed from the house sale. Luan Grocholski, an expert in ceramics who worked for Sotheby’s, caught only a glimpse of the vase in the stockroom – but it was enough to set his pulse racing.

‘I saw and just thought it couldn’t be true,’ he said. ‘I realised the quality was fantastic, and assumed it was a very high quality copy.’ He began to look in libraries and at other works from the same period, a research quest that eventually took him six weeks.

He and the auction house thus set their estimate of its value at £800,000 to £1.2million, hoping it might rise to a few million with luck. They did not anticipate the astonishing appetite of a cash-rich Chinese market to buy back its stolen or exported relics.

On Thursday evening, potential bidders filed into the two-storey warehouse beside West Ruislip Underground station. The musty room was cluttered with furniture and old paintings and bidders had to squeeze up to get in.

Among them – their identities unknown to anyone except Mr Reay – the mother and son watched in silence, possibly anxious as the vase was placed on what someone described later as a wobbly old table at the front of the room.

£53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase Article-0-0C0BE451000005DC-385_306x339
£53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase Article-0-0C0BE442000005DC-509_306x339


£53m moment: The winning bidder, seen turning round while clapping (left), is congratulated by the auctioneer


After a slow start, with six live bidders and three telephone bidders still in the game, the interested parties narrowed to two as the price soared into tens of millions. It took less than two minutes to rack up the final £20million, climaxing at an astonishing £53million.
Auctioneer and company director Peter Bainbridge shouted ‘Sold’ and slammed his gavel so hard on the rostrum, it shattered into several pieces.

He had just earned the family-run company at least £8.6million in commission, possibly several million more if they didn’t waive the usual extra fees.

The mother and son had just chalked up a fortune beyond their wildest dreams.

They will have to pay Capital Gains Tax of around £12millionbut they will be cheered by the fact that if its true value had been known at the time of probate, they would have received an inheritance tax bill of more than £17million.

Meanwhile in Beijing, an anonymous Chinese collector had just scooped a unique and historic treasure for his homeland.

The bidder who bought the vase was a Chinese man in his thirties, acting as agent for the buyer and sitting quietly on a sofa at the front of the room.

Yesterday at Bainbridge’s the engagingly eccentric Mr Bainbridge, 63, was happily posing for photographs and willingly re-enacting the drama of the previous night.

In a quieter corner, Mr Reay, who had comforted the sellers as the bidding got higher, said: ‘What’s sowonderful about it is they are very normal people.

‘They don’t have a lot. The mother just couldn’t speak, she was in tears.

‘They stayed at the back of the room, out of sight, and no one knew they were there, not even Peter Bainbridge.

‘This is the biggest shock of their lives. The mum said to me, “If only this had happened to me 30 years ago”.’

  • Additional reporting – Tamara Cohen and Nick McDermott





dblboggie
dblboggie

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Post by TexasBlue Fri Nov 12, 2010 8:43 pm

dblboggie wrote:Talk about hitting the jackpot!!!

Some people have all the luck.
TexasBlue
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Post by dblboggie Fri Nov 12, 2010 9:29 pm

TexasBlue wrote:
dblboggie wrote:Talk about hitting the jackpot!!!

Some people have all the luck.

Snicker Yes they do... Nod2

By the way, I discovered some more tricks to using WYSISYG you might be interested in.
dblboggie
dblboggie

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Post by TexasBlue Fri Nov 12, 2010 9:51 pm

dblboggie wrote:
TexasBlue wrote:
dblboggie wrote:Talk about hitting the jackpot!!!

Some people have all the luck.

Snicker Yes they do... Nod2

By the way, I discovered some more tricks to using WYSISYG you might be interested in.

Lemme know about them tricks. But wait till tomorrow. I have to work at the post office in the morning and then i'll be free the rest of the weekend. Harvest is all but done except for one field that's too wet. Uncle said he'll wait till the ground freezes to get that corn out. All of this means that I'm available to commit torture on all of you in here. cyclops
TexasBlue
TexasBlue

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Post by dblboggie Fri Nov 12, 2010 10:31 pm

TexasBlue wrote:
dblboggie wrote:
TexasBlue wrote:
dblboggie wrote:Talk about hitting the jackpot!!!

Some people have all the luck.

Snicker Yes they do... Nod2

By the way, I discovered some more tricks to using WYSISYG you might be interested in.

Lemme know about them tricks. But wait till tomorrow. I have to work at the post office in the morning and then i'll be free the rest of the weekend. Harvest is all but done except for one field that's too wet. Uncle said he'll wait till the ground freezes to get that corn out. All of this means that I'm available to commit torture on all of you in here. cyclops

You've got it buddy. Good to hear the harvest is mostly in, I'm guessing you guys will get ground freeze well before we do here in Ohio, so it should be wrapped in a few weeks.

Looking forward to the torture... so to speak... Snicker
dblboggie
dblboggie

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Post by The_Amber_Spyglass Sat Nov 13, 2010 2:45 am

The archaeologist in me wonders at its excellent condition and workmanship but if I'm being honest, I find the vase hideous. Very Happy
The_Amber_Spyglass
The_Amber_Spyglass

£53million Chinese vase was kept on wobbly bookcase Senmem10


http://sweattearsanddigitalink.wordpress.com/

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Post by dblboggie Sat Nov 13, 2010 8:11 pm

The_Amber_Spyglass wrote:The archaeologist in me wonders at its excellent condition and workmanship but if I'm being honest, I find the vase hideous. Very Happy

ROFL I know, right?!? Just amazing that anyone would pay that much for such an ugly vase, but hey, there is no accounting for taste.
dblboggie
dblboggie

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