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Latest news from Antiques Trade Gazette, the leading specialist publication for the art and antiques market


Victorian tortoiseshell and ormolu mantel table clock

23 January 2004

This impressive Victorian tortoiseshell and ormolu mantel table clock with three dials for GMT, Paris and New York time, each inscribed Viner London, sold for £26,000 at Woolley and Wallis’s first furniture sale of the year on January 13.

Get ready for Grosvenor on June 8

23 January 2004

Important Summer diary date, the Grosvenor House Art and Antiques Fair will be held in London from June 8 to 15 with the private preview on June 8 and the Charity Gala Reception on June 10.

A yard start for US clipper

23 January 2004

After years of regular sales at all the major auction houses, marine painting is an area in which top quality works by the most desirable names are in increasingly short supply.

Trade alerted to well-dressed female thief

19 January 2004

UK: The BADA have issued a description of a woman, operating under a number of names, thought to be responsible for a number of thefts at antiques shops in London. Last week, dealers in Kensington Church Street and in the Fulham Road were taken in by the woman, whose approach was most unusual.

New Midhurst auction rooms

19 January 2004

UK: Auctioneer Paul Dunn, formerly of Atwell Martin near Bath and John Nicholson’s of Fernhurst, has set up on his own in Midhurst, Surrey. South Downs Auctioneers will conduct a wide variety of auctions, including agricultural sales, but also plan regular catalogues of antiques and general furniture and effects.

LVMH bow out with Tajan sale

19 January 2004

Fashion giants LVMH have sold their controlling stake in leading French auction house Tajan to Rodart, a company owned by American businesswoman Rodica B. Seward. Financial details of the transaction have not been disclosed.

New guide on how to save key art works for nation

19 January 2004

Measures would not restrict art trade: BRITAIN may soon enjoy one of the most enlightened schemes for keeping key works of art in the country, thanks to the Goodison Review, which has just been published.