The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Card packs that can be aces in terms of value

- by Norman Watson

The highest price for any work of art is the $250 million paid by the tiny, oil-rich nation of Qatar for Paul Cezanne’s The Card Players.

The deal (sorry!) left them with an angular, moody painting of two Aix-en-Provence peasants in a card game.

It is impossible to trump that money-wise but for a fraction of the cost, the Qatarians could have purchased a fine set of Georgian playing cards which appeared recently at Lincolnshi­re auctioneer­s Bateman’s, pictured.

Each of this full set of 52 was decorated with individual copper-plate engraved designs and each had a fortunetel­ling text below.

The illustrati­ons were often humorous and the text moralistic. For example, the six of diamonds warns the lady holding it “You’ll be a bride & soon a widow too/But second marriage you will have cause to rue”.

The set sold for a 10-times estimate £3,200.

In terms of rarity, the Cloisters playing cards purchased for £120,000 by the New York Metropolit­an Museum of Art at Sotheby’s in London in 1983 is the oldest known full deck of cards in the world.

The 52 cards were made in the Burgundian territorie­s (modernday Luxembourg and Belgium) around c14701480.

Although considered priceless, they were recently assessed for insurance at $1.5 million. Historians at the Met believe the cards were used in some form of gambling.

I have seen other 15th Century cards at auction. Perhaps the best known was the celebrated Page of Staves tarot card, an illuminate­d and gold-heightened miniature painting on a card from around 1460. This single card made £23,000.

In terms of sets, a first issue of the 52 Counties of England and Wales pack, published by Robert Morden in 1676, took £12,000.

One of the most curious sets is All the Bubbles, which shows scenes of stock market crashes and financial woes from the year 1720. This remarkable set sold for £32,000.

The trio of aforementi­oned prices were achieved at the dispersal of the fabulous Jamie Ortiz-Patino playing card collection at Sotheby’s in 2013.

I recall admiring one of the rarest sets in Britain – scenes from the English Civil War – at the London Museum. Thankfully, Monk’s controvers­ial sacking of Dundee was not one of the cards.

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