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FRED Paris Yellow gold & diamonds Zipper Necklace, circa 1980
€45,000.00 -
Jean Puy (1876-1960) Seated Red-Haired Woman, oil on canvas, circa 1903
€18,500.00 -
Marc Chagall (1887-1985) Couple, drawing from 1967
€45,000.00 -
Gustave de Smet (1877-1943) Vase of flowers, Oil on canvas mounted on panel
€12,500.00 -
Gustave Courbet (1819-1877) Le Puits-Noir, oil on canvas, circa 1855/1865
Price on request -
Georges Braque (1882-1963) Crenellated head in ceramic counterproof, circa 1940/1950
€25,000.00 -
Georges Braque (1882-1963) Crenellated head, original terracotta, circa 1940/1950
€38,000.00 -
Constant Mayer (1829-1911) Woman and Child Sitting on a Wall, oil on canvas, circa 1873
€23,500.00 -
Robert Lefevre (1755-1830) Full-length portrait of Joséphine de Beauharnais, circa 1799
€125,000.00 -
Frans Verhas (1827-1897) The favorite jewel, oil on panel, circa 1850-1894
€48,000.00 -
Jules Breton (1827-1906) Gleaner bent from behind, oil on cardboard, circa 1853-1854
€46,000.00 -
Romain Cazes (1808-1881) Young girl, oil on canvas, 1839
€28,000.00 -
Edouard Goerg (1893-1969) The innocents, oil on canvas 1928
€35,000.00 -
Norbert Goeneutte (1854-1894) The Walker's Rest, oil on panel, 1884
€29,500.00 -
Jean Arp (1886-1966) Collage on paper laid down on board named «Blason poupée n°4», 1963
€15,500.00 -
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec (1864-1901) Mlle Polaire, lithography, circa 1895
€38,000.00 -
Robert Noir (1864-1931) Mother and Child, oil on canvas, 1912/1918
€12,000.00 -
Fabian De Castro (1868-1950) Young man pointing his finger, oil on canvas, 1926
€14,500.00 -
Emil Olsson (1890-1964) The Theater Archer, pastel on paper, circa 1923
€3,800.00 -
Exceptional sculpted group from the Quattrocento - Northern Italy first half of the 15th century
Price on request -
Important gray schist figure of an Atlas, Gandhara, 2nd/3rd century
€115,000.00 -
Pedro Creixams (1893-1965) VILAIN, self-portrait with a blue scarf, oil on cardboard 1921
€14,500.00 -
Manuel Ortiz de Zárate (1847-1946) L'attente, oil on canvas from 1911
€45,000.00 -
Henri Hayden (1883-1970) «La table triangulaire», oil on canvas circa 1959
€48,000.00 -
Edouard Morerod (1879-1919) «Mother and daughter», pastel on paper circa 1910
€8,500.00 -
An italian carved giltwood mirror, late 17th/early 18th century
€9,500.00 -
Jean-Michel Folon (1934-2005) Character, cutout with colours and rope mounted on a wooden box
€30,000.00 -
Jean-Baptiste Claude Sene (1748-1803) Three Louis XVI chairs with lyre backrests
€9,500.00 -
Byzantine jewelleryGold medallion setting an 11th-century lapis lazuli cameo
€135,000.00 -
Rare Roman gold necklace found in the ruins of Herculaneum
€18,000.00 -
Salvador Dalí (1904-1989) Bronze sculpture Woman giraffe or «Venus à la girafe»
€18,500.00 -
Pierre Carrier-Belleuse (1851-1932) The chill, pastel on canvas, 1891
€9,500.00 -
Victor Vasarely (1906-1997) Planetary Folkrore N°2, multiple kinetic
€12,500.00 -
Damien Hirst (1965) Spin Skull, acrylic and metallic paint on paper
€18,500.00 -
Gae Aulenti (1927-2012) Large silk square created for the launch of the Louis Vuitton watch
€1,500.00 -
Auguste Rodin (1840-1917) Bust of Balzac, bronze with shaded green patina
Reserved lot -
Auguste Renoir (1841-1919) Etching, Le Chapeau Epinglé (The daughter of Berthe Morisot and her cousin)
€3,500.00 -
Ring white gold set with a orangy yellow diamond
€12,500.00 -
Royal Sevres Manufacture All of Louis-Philippe's «Le Service des Princes» at the Tuileries Castle
€3,800.00 -
Attr. to Jean-Henri Riesener (1734-1806) Royal snack table from the Tuileries castle
€28,000.00 -
DAVID RYCKAERT III (1612-1661) Ceres asking for hospitality from farmers, oil on canvas
€47,000.00 -
Jean-Baptiste NINI (1717-1786) Queen Marie-Antoinette's medallion profile
€6,200.00 -
Attr. to François Dumont (1751-1831) Beautiful and important miniature of Princess Elisabeth of France
€18,500.00 -
Four chairs made of painted and gilded wood from the imperial family of Russia
€26,000.00 -
Paulus Oham the Younger (1634-1671) Small plate called paten representing Emperor Ferdinand III
€1,950.00 -
Jean-Michel Atlan (1913-1960) Composition, 1945, oil on Isorel
€29,500.00 -
Etienne Loys (1724-1783) Woman with a basket, oil on canvas
€38,500.00 -
Piero Fornasetti (1913-1988) Monete series floor lamp (coins) in painted metal, circa 1950/60
€15,500.00 -
Massimo Papiri Illuminated coffee table with bar compartment
€12,800.00 -
Antoniucci Volti (1915-1989) Woman with book, terra cotta bas-relief on oak plaque
€2,150.00 -
Renaissance portrait of Marguerite de Valois, known as Queen Margot
€16,500.00 -
Ateliers de la Marche (Aubusson - Felletin) Tapestry «Jeanne d'Arc on horsebackl», 17th century after Claude Vignon
€29,500.00 -
Manufacture royale de Sèvres Pedestal table in bronze carved and gilded with Sevres porcelain, from the royal family
€14,500.00 -
Jacob D. R. Meslee (1803-1813) Royal shepherdess and royal armchair in gilded wood from the Empire period
€216,000.00 -
Cameo with a bust of Marie de Medici, Queen of France , 17th, amber, gold and diamonds
Reserved lot -
Giovanni Battista Beinaschi (1636-1688) Christ and the adulterous woman, oil on canvas, 17th
€78,000.00 -
Fountain pen, high jewellery: white gold, diamonds and sapphires
€285,000.00 -
DAUM Table lamp with geometric decoration in transparent orange-amber glass, 1925-1930
€12,500.00 -
Arman (1928-2005) Mi-Siren. Bronze sculpture. 1996
€12,500.00 -
Honoré DAUMIER (1808 - 1879) Le Ratapoil, black patina bronze
€55,000.00 -
Edgar Degas (1834-1917) Femme s'étirant
€32,000.00 -
Amedeo Modigliani (1884-1920) Tête de jeune fille à la Frange
€28,000.00
Purchases of works of art, collectibles and exceptional antiques
Works of art and exceptional antiques are above all a reflection of a personality, a taste, a soul and are especially unique to each individual.
Whether you like to collect vinyl records in limited editions or spend time in galleries looking for your next painting, it's usually always the emotion that triggers the act of buying.
In addition, there is the pleasure of the quest, the will to retrace a story or to revive memories.
In short, there are dozens of different reasons to acquire a work of art or a collectible object and sometimes this act may seem irrational both because of the size of the work and the price that some are willing to pay for it.
Why do we buy a work of art?
Buying a work of art can have two main reasons. It can be a purchase for pleasure or to build up capital.
However, this act needs to be analyzed in a little more depth. Buying a work of art is often a way to assert your personality, to let your tastes speak for themselves.
It is also an excellent way to decorate your interior in a unique way. A work of art is authentic, often produced in a single copy, so it is impossible to find the same work in one's neighbor.
For the most philanthropists, it is also a way to support artists, to allow them to launch themselves and to be able to live from their passion.
When you buy a work of art, you often want to know more about it. Not only on its history but also on the techniques used to make it, the movement of which it is a part, etc. It is an excellent way to cultivate yourself, to open yourself to the world. Moreover, the acquisition of a work, and more particularly the first one, is often the result of chance, an encounter with an artist, a gallery owner or during an exhibition that has particularly touched you.
Modigliani, Rodin, Dali, to name but a few, are masters of their time, but today there is all kinds of art, which makes it an eclectic and open field. Take the example of Street Art, if it can be considered common by some, others are willing to put a lot of money into one of these works. This was the case recently with Banksy's Balloon Girl.
Valuable collectibles
Just as with a work of art, buying valuable collectibles is often done for pleasure but more rarely for making a profit.
If any object can be collectible, not all of them have any value other than sentimental.
Quite often it is a hobby, started in an innocuous way, based on a gift for example, which would sound like something special. As little as the gift comes from a loved one, the desire to acquire other objects of the same kind is almost natural.
It can also be a ritual that has been set up because of a particular affection (imagine, for example, a person who loves turtles, offering them an object representing the animal becomes almost inevitable). Or in connection with the profession: an oenologist who is regularly offered bottles of wine can easily start a collection of corks.
The most psychologists among you will see it as a gap to be filled, a need to reassure themselves.
But whatever the reason, for an object to be considered as having value, it must comply with certain rules.
First of all, it must be rare or available only in limited edition, unlike mass-produced objects which do not have any particular value. The affixing of a signature, stamp will also give value to the object, as will the quality of the materials used.
Pay attention to the condition of the object but also to its time. Despite what one may believe, an archaeological object does not necessarily have a great value due to its age.
Finally, the time spent on completion can also increase the value of an object. For a piece of silverware for example, the more meticulous and precise the jeweller's work, the more likely the object will be to increase in value.
Whether it is a work of art, a valuable object or a exceptional antique, today there is a unanimous desire to make them accessible online.
Indeed, the art and antiques market is too often considered as being reserved for ultra-cultivated people, living in a world apart.
To overcome this and in particular to encourage the younger generation to take an interest in it, new technologies are being used. It is now possible to buy works of art or bid online. Social networks are also used to share paintings, sculptures or any other collector's item with as many people as possible.
Then you too can be tempted to buy a work art online.