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		<title>Disregarded attic vase sold for $69 million</title>
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			<title>Comment #2</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/11/disregarded-attic-vase-sold-for-69-million.htm#c56361</link>
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			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Nov 2010 17:35:00 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>JAP69</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>My wife and I were planning on moving in the past couple months but gecided to stay. Any how we took down all the stuff from the attic to sort out. I had some boxes from my mother stored from when she passed away 20 years ago but never opened and sorted. I opened one box and was discarding some of the contents and came across a vase. I put it in the discard pile and my daughter came to see what I was doing. I showed her the stuff I was discarding and I asked her if she wanted any of it. She deci... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/11/disregarded-attic-vase-sold-for-69-million.htm#c56361">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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			<title>Comment #1</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/11/disregarded-attic-vase-sold-for-69-million.htm#c56356</link>
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			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Nov 2010 16:23:37 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>JAP69</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p>You never know whats in an attic. Garage sales are a bonanza for the knowledgeable.</p>]]></description>
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			<title>Original Blog Entry: Disregarded attic vase sold for $69 million</title>
			<link>https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/11/disregarded-attic-vase-sold-for-69-million.htm</link>
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			<pubDate>Sat, 13 Nov 2010 15:12:18 GMT</pubDate>
			<dc:creator>truesee</dc:creator>
			<description><![CDATA[<p> Disregarded attic vase sold for $69 million<br /><br />CHUCK BENNETT<br /><br />POST WIRE SERVICES<br /><br />7:22 AM, November 13, 2010<br /><br />Sometimes it pays not to listen to experts. Pays $69 million, in fact.<br /><br />A British couple once brought a family curio -- an ornate Chinese vase that they owned for decades -- onto the precursor of the Antiques Roadshow for a little bit of history about the heirloom.<br /><br />The snooty curator of Going For a Song declared the 16-inch-tall porcelain vase nothing more than a very clever reproduction.<br /><br />Luckily, the couple, longtime residents of the working-class London suburb of Pinner, didn&#x27;t listen to the expert some 40 years ago, and held onto the piece.<br /><br />&#x27;POT&#x27; LUCK: An expert on the forerunner of Antiques Roadshow dismissed this $69 million vase as merely a clever reproduction. AP<br /><br />The vase went back to a bookshelf, and later to the dusty attic of their modest home.<br /><br />The couple grew old, and eventually passed away. The vase was nearly forgotten.<br /><br />Then this year, their surviving relatives, the 70-year-old sister of the husband and her adult two children, were cleaning out the attic.<br /><br />They were hunting for family heirlooms and items to sell at a run-of-the-mill estate auction, like furniture or carpets.<br /><br />We were clearing her brother&#x27;s house after he died, and I looked at the vase and said, &#x27;Oh, that looks nice.&#x27; It had just sat on the bookcase doing absolutely nothing, David Reay, manager of the Bainbridges auction house, told the London Evening Standard.<br /><br />They told me it had been valued at just [$1,300] two months earlier. They also told me the owner had taken it on &#x27;Going For a Song&#x27; on the BBC about 40 years ago. He was told it was a very clever reproduction.<br /><br />Reay knew it was valuable, but he still had it sent to the Arts Club of London where it sat on a metal table in a busy kitchen in between public viewings.<br /><br />Finally, experts evaluated the piece and estimated it could sell for over a million dollars, noting it was made around 1740 for the royal court of Qianlong, the fifth emperor of the Qing dynasty -- a period when Chinese porcelain-making had reached its zenith.<br /><br />The two adult children, a brother and sister, believed it was just an ornament that had been in the family since the 1930s, and passed down from a relative who traveled internationally.<br /><br />The auction house of Peter Bainbridge -- a tiny business with just three full-time employees -- went ahead with the auction on Thursday.<br /><br />The vase had attracted worldwide attention, particularly from China&#x27;s nascent but growing cadre of wealthy art collectors.<br /><br />Bainbridge&#x27;s modest auction house was packed.<br /><br />The room was crackling with excitement. The couple were down in the middle of the audience, but no one knew, said Bainbridge staffer Peggy Bates.<br /><br />Then the bidding began.<br /><br />Bainbridge, whose big gest sale to that point had been $160,000, kept his cool as bids pushed the price past $10 million, then $30 million, then $50 million, to finally close at $69.5 million after 30 minutes of in tense bidding.<br /><br />There was a si lence that wrapped it self around the sale as the figure grew slowly but surely up to the sky, Bainbridge said.<br /><br />I&#x27;m an auctioneer, so at that point, I&#x27;m just doing the professional job I&#x27;m paid to do. But once the hammer&#x27;s down, you do take stock slightly, and think, Oh, wow, that&#x27;s really rather a lot of money.<br /><br />The couple had to run out of the room to catch their breath.<br /><br />And Bainbridge himself had to pause to realize he&#x27;ll collect a $13 million premium on top of the closing sale price.<br /><br />Once Britain&#x27;s value-added tax was tacked on, the final price was $85.9 million, won by an anonymous buyer in China who phoned in the bid.<br /><br />The brother and sister were utterly stunned.<br /><br />She told me she wished it happened 30 years ago, Reay, the Bainbridge manager, said.<br /><br />Bainbridge himself called it a fairy tale for an utterly normal family.<br /><br />The couple, like the buyer, insisted on remaining anonymous.<br /><br />Their sale was the most expensive piece of Chinese artwork ever. .<br /><br />Little is known about the vase, but it was likely looted from a Peking imperial palace by British and French soldiers during the Second Opium War, some 150 years ago.<br /><br />British troops were given free rein to loot Emperor Xianfeng&#x27;s Summer Palace of Gold.<br /><br />They then torched the place and marched away laden with tons of booty.<br /><br />China&#x27;s booming economy means new collectors are joining the market all the time, and wealthy buyers are keen to repatriate treasures from their heritage.<br /><br />LINK TO VASE:<br /><br />http://www.nypost.com/p/news/international/attic_curio_finally_urns_respect_wGuepWOHbm0DKcyIegeiZK#ixzz15Avur8Vc<br /><br />... &#x5b;&#xa0;<a href="https://blogs.lotterypost.com/truesee/2010/11/disregarded-attic-vase-sold-for-69-million.htm">More</a>&#xa0;&#x5d;</p>]]></description>
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