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Rare Chinese antiques in Heathfield home sell for more than £130k
Rare Chinese antiques in Heathfield home sell for more than £130k

BBC News

time26-05-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

Rare Chinese antiques in Heathfield home sell for more than £130k

Two rare Chinese antiques more than 300 years old and part of a family collection in East Sussex have been sold for a combined £135,500. The vase and wine pitcher were from the reign of the Kangxi Emperor (1661 to 1722) and were bought by art connoisseur and philanthropist William Cleverley Alexander in 1907 and items had been in Mr Alexander's private collection at his country home in Heathfield Park for more than a Axford, chairman of the auction house Woolley & Wallis, said the family were "delighted" with the auction result on Tuesday. He added: "What the sale really shows is the importance of history and provenance - collectors prize provenance very highly."The vase, which has a rare underglaze decorated with two squirrels hiding in a fruiting grapevine, was sold to a buyer in the Far East for £94,500 against an estimate of £20,000-£30,000. The pitcher was sold for £41,000 to a European buyer against an estimate of £4,000-£6, Axford said: "This shows despite the economic and political troubles in the world, really good items remain highly desirable." He explained ceramic wares modelled in the form of characters like the wine pitcher were a "remarkable" innovation of the Kangxi period - an era of stability following the collapse of the Ming Dynasty. He added the pitcher was a "particularly decorative example". It has a blue Buddhist lion finial, an unusually long neck and moulded as the combined Chinese characters of Fu (good fortune) and Shou (longevity). There were various uses for wine pitchers of this period, including ritualistic, ceremonial or funerary use. "They were were created to literally 'toast' the dead and some for more practical usage," Mr Axford added. Mr Alexander (1840-1916), who was also a banker, was credited for popularising Asian art in Britain during the Victorian into a wealthy family, he used his financial resources to amass an impressive collection of Asian patronage of arts supported emerging artists of the time, including James McNeill Whistler who was famous for his painting Whistler's Mother. According to the auction house, Mr Alexander bought the wine pitcher for £45 from William Dickinson & Son in 1907. He then bought the vase from antiques dealer John Sparks on June 1913 for just £30.

Rare Chinese antiquities from Heathfield collection to be auctioned
Rare Chinese antiquities from Heathfield collection to be auctioned

BBC News

time11-05-2025

  • Business
  • BBC News

Rare Chinese antiquities from Heathfield collection to be auctioned

Two rare Chinese antiques that had been in an East Sussex home for more than 100 years could fetch up to £36,000 at vase and wine pitcher were from the reign of the Kangxi Emperor (1661 to 1722) and were purchased by art connoisseur and philanthropist William Cleverley Alexander in 1907 and 1913. Both items had been in Mr Alexander's private collection in his country home in Heathfield Park and his descendants are putting them up for auction for the first time, according to auctioneers Woolley & Axford, chairperson of the auction house, said it was an "honour to be entrusted to sell the two pieces" and they anticipate interest from around the world. The auction house said the Kangxi era was a time of renewed stability in China, following the fall of the Ming Dynasty, which prompted a surge in artistic creativity. It added ceramics from this particular era are "regarded as some of the most exquisite ever produced".The vase is a rare underglaze decorated with two squirrels hiding in a fruiting grapevine. It features stylised lotus flowerheads and leaf scrolls with red flower motifs against a white background. The auction house said it carried an estimate of between £20,000 and £30, yellow-glazed pitcher is fashioned in the shape of the Chinese characters which translate as good fortune (Fu), prosperity (Lu) and longevity (Shou) and carries an estimate of between £4,000 and £6,000. Mr Alexander was credited for popularising Asian art in Britain during the Victorian era. Back in 2005, Woolley & Wallis sold one of Mr Alexander's collection in Heathfield Park, a blue and white vase from China's Yuan Dynasty (1271 to 1368), for £3m following an initial estimate of between £200,000 and £300,000.

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