村里的真土豪

飘在加国

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2006-01-16
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Mystery buyer dishes up $1.2M for rare plate at Ottawa auction

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The initial estimate of value by Walker’s Fine and Arts and Estate Auctions of this Yuan or early Ming Dynasty plate, about 40 centimetres in diameter and decorated with a three-clawed dragon, was a mere $700-$900.
Photograph by: Handout photo , Walker's Auctions

OTTAWA — Jeffrey Walker knew the blue plate was special.

Just HOW special, however, the auctioneer didn’t realize until a mystery figure this week paid $1.2 million including a buyer’s premium for the Chinese glazed pottery after outbidding other potential buyers from around the world.

The initial estimate of value by Walker’s Fine and Arts and Estate Auctions? A mere $700 to $900, which the auctioneer says was intentionally conservative for the plate from the Yuan or early Ming Dynasty, about 40 centimetres in diameter and decorated with a three-clawed dragon.

And which, as interest built in the weeks before Wednesday’s sale of Canadian and international art, Walker realized was well below what collectors might spend for the plate, estimated to be about 600 years old. Still, “We were hoping then for $10,000, maybe $15,000.”

The buyer, who didn’t want his name or even his nationality revealed, travelled to Ottawa and competed with Internet and telephone bidders for the plate. He didn’t enter the fray until bidding reached $250,000.

“From a quarter-million it started to get quiet,” Walker relates. “It was really ‘oohs’ and ‘ahhs’ up to about a quarter. Really quiet from a quarter to a half-million, and you could hear a pin drop above a half million, until the hammer came down at a million-and-twenty-five, and applause.”

The plate came from the estate of Waltraud (Wally) Ellis, a Belleville, Ont., woman who died in June. She was the widow of John Ellis, former Progressive Conservative MP for Hastings and Prince Edward-Hastings. The pottery is believed to have been passed down by her Austrian grandparents.

Now, it’s likely heading to China, where collectors are intent on reacquiring art items from that country’s long history.

“It’s just a classic example of the stars lining up,” Walker says. “You’ve got a great object that’s being sold into a really strong market for the Chinese arts.”

The sale will also benefit the Canadian art scene. Ellis had originally willed the piece to Toronto’s Gardiner Museum, but the museum asked that it be sold so it could invest the proceeds in Canadian pottery. Because of that, Walker waived his firm’s usual auction fee, though he still collected the buyer’s premium of $175,000.

 
还是国内的土豪多呀,村里的土豪也就值个8、9百刀,土狼屯那么大个大城市人都看不上,到了中国土豪那里就超过一个米了。
 
我说这几天怎么没看见老向呢, 原来淘盘去去了 ...
 
靠,以后我要到salvation army扫盘子去。
 
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