Laman

Showing posts with label sotheby's. Show all posts
Showing posts with label sotheby's. Show all posts

What's in Your Attic?

When I first heard about the upcoming Chatsworth House attic sale at Sotheby's a few weeks ago, my heart skipped a beat.  I could only imagine the treasures that would be available for sale.  At that time, not many photos were available and I'm very grateful to Sotheby's for sending them so I could share them with you. 

As an American, English manor homes will always hold a glamorous allure to me.  If you've ever watched Gosford Park, then you have an idea of not just what happens upstairs but the chaos that happens behind the scenes and downstairs.  Those days are for the most part over and now the owners open the houses up to paying visitors so they can keep them in the family.  When that doesn't quite pay the bills, they are sometimes forced to sell off treasures. Earl Spencer recently had a sale of items from Althorp House to pay for roof repairs.  Castle Coole in Ireland was forced to clear it's attics after they were deemed a fire hazard. The most exciting things that most Americans have in their attics are broken Barbie's and old bicycles while the English usually have priceless paintings and antiques.

The Duke of Devonshire is selling off old artifacts and useless objects to clear space in rooms whose doors could barely open and to raise funds.  It can cost upwards of £5 million just to keep a stately house and its grounds running per year. Chatsworth House is owned by the Chatsworth House Trust and the family pays rent to live in it.  For further reading, I recoomend the fascinating article by Charles Spencer entitled Enemies of the Estate that ran in the January 2010 issue of Vanity Fair that is available online here.

You have probably already seen Chatsworth and not even known it.  The house was the stand in for Pemberly in the 2005 version of Pride and Prejudice staring Keira Knightly.  Ms. Knightly also played Georgiana Cavendish, Duchess of Devonshire in the 2008 film The Duchess which was also shot at Chatsworth where The Duchess actually lived after she married to the Duke of Devonshire.  Movie shoots also help to pay the bills on stately manor homes as well.

Not only are there wonderful pieces of furniture, china, books, paintings and jewelry, up for sale at the auction but a car, carriages, and fireplace mantels.  Many architectural salvage items from Devonshire House in London that were removed before it was demolished in the 1920's will also be for sale.  Some of these were found in the old stable block and hadn't been touched for almost a century including pieces designed by William Kent.  While I don't think I can afford much in this sale, I might register just in case.  Drinking my tea out of a tea cup from Chatsworth House would definitely be chic! Happy Bidding!

Chatsworth Attic Sale
Derbyshire, England
Viewing October 1-4, 2010
Auction October 5-7, 2010

The Duke of Devonshire

Chatsworth Painted Hallway

Chatsworth Statue

Chatsworth Main Staircase

Chatsworth Blue Drawing Room

Blue Drawing Room

Chatsworth Library

Chatsworth Dining Room

Ballroom at Devonshire House with highlighted items to be auctions at Chatsworth sale

George II Fireplace by William of Kent 1735

20th-century china

Vintage china teacups

George III gilt-bronze mounted library bookcase, circa 1800

Forty silver meat and poulty covers in wood chest

Vintage luggage

Humber open touring four-seater car, 1914

Garden lamps, 19th-century

Four drapery panels and two pelmets of Chinese brocade fabric

Vintage textiles

Louis XV Chair

Photos from Sotheby's and Simon Upton
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Remembering Princess Grace

This year marks the 25th anniversary of the death of Her Serene Highness Princess Grace of Monaco and there are quite a few things going on to remember the life and legacy of this style icon.

First, Sotheby's in New York will exhibit Grace, Princess of Monaco: A Tribute to the Life and Legacy of Grace Kelly. This exhibition will feature dresses, jewelry, photographs, letters, video and other unique items, most of which have never been seen outside of Monaco. These items span the extraordinary life of Grace Kelly, from Hollywood star and style icon to Princess of Monaco as a wife, mother and humanitarian. The exhibition will be accompanied by a commemorative catalogue, published by the Consulate General of Monaco. The proceeds from the sale of the book will benefit The Princess Grace Foundation-USA, which is dedicated to identifying and assisting emerging talent in theatre, dance and film.
On October 25th, at the annual Princess Grace Awards gala in New York, Sotheby's will auction off two outfits worn by Grace Kelly to benefit her foundation. One of the dresses is the Helen Rose ball gown worn by Grace Kelly in 1956 musical comedy High Society, seen above and below.


The other dress is a Givenchy-designed sleeveless dress with matching fringed bolero jacket that she wore on an official 1961 visit with Prince Rainier to a White House lunch with President and Mrs. Kennedy.

From October 21 - 26, six gowns of historic note worn by Grace Kelly/Princess Grace of Monaco will serve as inspiration to some of America's best known fashion designers (Oscar de la Renta, Carolina Herrera, Ralph Lauren, Zac Posen, Ralph Rucci, and Vera Wang) as they create one-of-a-kind haute couture to celebrate the classic style of the American-born Princess in the 25th year since her passing. The designs will be exhibited at Saks Fifth Avenue's New York City flagship store during October's A Celebration of Grace and each will be auctioned with final bidding at the Casino Couture event at Sotheby's on October 24.

There are also two new books out to commemorate 25th anniversary of Grace Kelly's death including Grace Kelly: A Life in Pictures and The Grace Kelly Years: Princess of Monaco. They would make a nice gift for the holidays for any chic and stylish friend or for yourself to remember the style icon who had an Hermes bag named after her. Now that's chic!

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Chic at Sotheby's

We buy a lot of things from auctions for our clients so I'm often perusing the catalogs. Even if you don't buy anything, I think they are a great resource for design ideas and a reference for custom pieces. There's a great photo of Kelly Wearstler from her book Domicilium Decoratus of her lying around reading auction catalogs. I get the feeling she's a serious buyer.

Anyway, the point of my post is that while flipping through the 20th Century Decorative Arts Selected by Gordon Watson sale catalog for the Sotheby's auction tomorrow in London, I came across the screen above designed by Robert Crowder. I'm more of a modern kind of girl but for some reason I really love this screen and technically, it is modern since it was made in the 1960's. The description from the catalog is pretty interesting too.

"Crowder, an American, first visited Japan in 1934. The trip began a lifelong love affair with the country and its art. His training with the great painters Shunko Mochizuki and Shimamoto-sensei served him well after his repatriation to the United States in 1943. After a brief stay in Chicago, Crowder moved west, opening a gallery in Los Angeles in the neighbourhood of Greta Garbo and other Hollywood legends. He quickly became famous for his screens and fabulous textiles, which as recently as 2005 were ordered for an international redecoration of the Chanel boutiques."

In a continuation of the story, the expansion and redesign of the Chanel boutique by Peter Marino won an AIA Institute Honor Award for Interior Architecture in 2005. The only photos I can find are very modern so I have no idea what they did with the screens and textiles mentioned in the catalog but I still think it's interesting. So the moral of this story is, check out an auction catalog, you never know what you might find!
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