Latest News Articles by Roland Arkell
Earliest known Castiglione court painting to headline Sotheby’s Hong Kong series
01 May 2026Asian Art Week at Sotheby’s Hong Kong will be led by the earliest extant court painting by the Italian Jesuit artist Giuseppe Castiglione (1688-1766).
Not just castles on castle-tops
01 May 2026Cathedrals, palaces and abbeys were also among the sights featured as British tourism developed
Asian art auction previews
01 May 2026While May’s series of UK Asian art auctions lacks the overall focus of the Asian Art in London initiative in the autumn or the pomp of other spring events in New York or Hong Kong, it remains a key moment in the calendar.
Inscriptions tell tales of colonial silver items
01 May 2026The group of Chinese ‘export’ silver offered by Gorringe’s (25% buyer’s premium) in Lewes on April 21 came by descent from Reginald Follett Codrington Hedgeland (1874-1967), an Oxford graduate from Exeter who joined the Chinese Maritime Customs Service in 1898.
Personal library of a pioneering British scholar of Armenian and Iranian studies comes to auction
28 April 2026Volumes from the personal library of a pioneering British scholar of Armenian and Iranian studies form part of Sworders’ latest Books and Maps auction.
Second Titanic watch said to have gone down with Astor sells in a US saleroom
24 April 2026Two years after a Wiltshire auction house set a record for Titanic memorabilia with ‘the watch recovered from the body of John Jacob Astor’ at £900,000, another timekeeper making precisely the same claim has sold in Chicago for $800,000 (£592,000).
Morris & Co Labours of the Month tiles work wonders in Edinburgh to reap a £75,000 auction reward
24 April 2026The latest Design Since 1860 sale at Lyon & Turnbull in Edinburgh was topped by four Morris & Co tile panels depicting the Labours of the Months dated to c.1865.
The world of dealer Gordon Reece comes to Wiltshire
24 April 2026As a dealer, collector and enthusiast of ethnographic art, Gordon Reece spent a lifetime travelling the globe in search of artefacts.
Brounker Watts pocket watch up for grabs
24 April 2026The London watch and clock maker Brounker Watts (c.1670-1717), an apprentice to Joseph Knibb, became a member of the Clockmakers Company in 1697.
Kiwi pin cushion picked out as a rarity at Gloucestershire sale
24 April 2026Flightless bird walks away with a new owner as silver novelty rarities catch the eye at Kinghams
Anglo-Indian furniture in a good market place
24 April 2026Though sourced separately, the two best-selling furniture lots at Gorringe’s (25% buyer’s premium) latest Fine Art & Interiors sale in Lewes were both products of colonial India.
Kangxi wall sconces bid over five times estimate
24 April 2026An auction titled China 500 Years held by Mayfair orientalist firm Plakas (29% buyer’s premium) on March 19 included elements of two rare Kangxi (1662-1722) blue and white porcelain wall sconces. They were estimated at £2000-3000 but contested to £17,000.
Huge Flambé Landscape vase sets new record for any piece of Moorcroft pottery
21 April 2026The quarter-century old auction record for Moorcroft pottery has been broken with the sale of a massive Flambé Landscape pattern vase for £32,000.
Turning the tables on Victorian furniture: Trollope's exhibition quality example takes five-figure sum
17 April 2026Quality and craftsmanship is rarely out of fashion.
Florence Nightingale opines on the first Geneva Convention
17 April 2026A letter written by Florence Nightingale in which she discusses the creation of the Red Cross and the Geneva Convention is being sold by Sworders.
Pick of the week: A barnstorming tale of murder most foul attracts bidders at Essex auction
17 April 2026The Red Barn Murder of 1827, which occurred in the tiny rural village of Polstead, Suffolk was the biggest crime story of the era.
Iznik pottery from two pioneer British collections returns to auction
17 April 2026Produced in Ottoman Turkey between the 15th and 17th centuries, Iznik pottery experienced a sudden and passionate surge of Western interest in the mid 19th century.
Furniture and snuffbox benefit from a bit of regal assistance
17 April 2026A Queen Anne olivewood oyster, holly and walnut cabinet on stand offered by Dreweatts (27/26% buyer’s premium) in Newbury was among a number of lots sold recently showing the commercial boost that royal provenance can provide.