Bangkok Post

Vase found in attic sells for $19m

-

PARIS: An 18th-century Chinese vase forgotten for decades in a shoebox in a French attic sold for €16.2 million ($19 million) at Sotheby’s in Paris yesterday — more than 30 times the estimate.

Experts at the auction house said the exquisite porcelain vessel was made for the Qing dynasty Emperor Qianlong and had set a guide price of a much more modest €500,000.

“This is a major work of art, it is as if we had just discovered a Caravaggio,” Olivier Valmier, the Asian arts expert at the auction house, told reporters before the sale.

“The vase, which was in perfect condition, is the only known example in the world bearing such detail,” he added.

Rare porcelain from the Qianlong period has been going for astronomic­al prices recently, with a bowl sold last April by Sotheby’s in Hong Kong for $30.4 million.

The vase — which is decorated with idealised images of deer and cranes — was found by chance among dozens of other pieces of Chinoiseri­e in the attic of a house in France earlier this year.

The family — from near Paris — had acquired it at the end of the 19th century but it has lain unloved in a shoe box in the attic for decades.

“We didn’t like the vase too much, and my grandparen­ts didn’t like it either,” said the owner of the piece, who only got in touch with Sotheby’s in March.

It was still in the shoebox when it was presented to Sotheby’s experts for authentifi­cation.

The staggering price paid by a young Chinese collector, who was at the auction himself, is the highest ever recorded by the auction house in Paris.

The man, who was wearing a jogging top, beat off bids from other Chinese collectors, mostly over the phone.

The collector, who has has not been named, also did the bidding himself — a rarity at this level of auction.

The polychrome vase with its idyllic landscape of mist-topped mountains and pine trees also carries a six-character “reign mark” on its base.

The only other similar vase that has so

far come to light is in the Guimet museum of Asiatic arts in Paris, though it does not have the cranes.

Only four like pieces have been documented as coming from the imperial workshops in the 1790s.

“Such elaborate and challengin­g designs are exceedingl­y rare on Qing imperial porcelain,” Sotheby’s said on its website.

 ?? AFP ?? The bulb-shaped vase, painted in delicate shades of green, blue, yellow and purple, was described as an exceptiona­lly well-preserved porcelain vessel made for an emperor of the Qing dynasty.
AFP The bulb-shaped vase, painted in delicate shades of green, blue, yellow and purple, was described as an exceptiona­lly well-preserved porcelain vessel made for an emperor of the Qing dynasty.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand