Christie's
ALL Clarice Cliff
Sale ~ November 3rd 2000
RESULTS:
The
tempestuous weather on Christie’s viewing days meant less collectors
were able to get to London to check the sale, so not surprisingly on the
day there were less than the usual number of people in the Hanger. Yet
there seemed to be many new faces in the room, notably couples pouring
over catalogues and coordinating bidding; Clarice always has been a shared
passion….! The strength of the dollar against the pound meant there were
more than the usual American bidders, both collectors and dealers. The
lower turnout did not impede the ‘Clarice Cliff magic’ as we were to see
a sale where 84% of the lots sold!
The
Vase
section started with more available and common shapes and designs so prices
were generally as expected. Some later shapes and less sought after designs
failed to sell, and others because of high estimates. Bargains here
included the shape 370 Gloria Globe vase for £325.
High prices included lot 22, an Original Bizarre vase for
£881 and the same design on a shape 120 was £750. The sought
after shape 360 in Inspiration Caprice made £1410. The Stagecoach
from Chetwynd House with Colley Shorter’s initials was a bargain at £352.
Perhaps surprisingly, bidders ignored some quite good early pieces at around
£300 to £350, whilst a pair of the very available Lovebirds
vases made £329. The Melon 365 was the first real surprise
of the sale selling to an American bidder in the room for a record £3525.
This made the same shape in Summerhouse seem reasonable at £1762!
The same American bidder also secured the shape 370 Globe in InspirationClouvre
for £3525. A Rudyard ConicalRose bowl was £2115,
whilst the Pastel Melon shape 14 made a 'way above estimate’
£4112. The 'Star' lot in the in the sale in terms of provenance
and history was the untypical but still wonderful
TibetanGinger
jar, decorated by Clarice Cliff herself in 1926. It made £9400. It
sold to a British female buyer who later commented ’I thought I did well’
and that she was pleased with the price.
Some
restored or hairlined Lotus jugs were ignored by bidders at the
start of the next section, but then an Inspiration Caprice
was £3290, and an OrangeRoof Cottage £3055. Overall,
there were not as many good examples as in previous sales, which explains
the results. A series of Fancies followed, which saw a TennisCaldron
make £564, a Melon Sabot £564, whilst a pairof
shape 331 candlesticks in Blue Autumn seemed a bargain at
£352 As was to be the case later in the sale, a high estimate caused
a lot to fail here: the Autumn Shell shape miniature cruet
was estimated at £600-800. An OrangeHouse Drum shape
jampot was the star of this section selling for £822. Then, a couple,
who had managed to get to London from Scotland, were rewarded with a good
Conical Bowl in Trees andHouse for £998. The
Capricorn Star sign (Clarice’s sign) made £587.
There
were very high and low prices in Conical sugar Dredgers. A damaged
Orange Hydrangea was £235 whilst a Honolulu seemed
a bargain at £822. Orange Erin made a high £2820
and a Xanthic was £1997. Several Laura Knight plates made
£646 to £998. A very high £3290 for a Hereford
shape biscuit barrel was fetched by the example in House &
Bridge. A section of Coronet and Athens jugs saw a Sunray
make £950 and a rare Kandina £1075. The first two Appliqué
lots, bowls, failed to reach rather higher estimates, but the AppliquéIdyll
dinner service was then the top price in the sale. A South African buyer
paid £15,275 against a £5000-7000 estimate, after competitive
bidding between the telephones and the room.
A major
surprise was the Teapot/Teasets section: a Bon Jour
in Delecia Pansies was £1762 selling to an English
collector, whilst an almost complete Stamford Melon set was
a bargain at £2232. As just a few lots before a singleConical
teapot in Melon was £1527 it is not possible to explain
the prices! The Blue Cowslip Bon Jour set failed
to sell against its estimate of £3500-4000, whereas 25 pieces of
BlueChintz
tea and coffee ware and plates was a very good buy at £3525. The
21 piece Melon pieces that followed also seemed a very good buy
for £3760. A record price for Lynton teaware of £3525
was made by the Delecia Pansies set, and then a Lynton
coffee set (with a hairlined pot) made a high £2585 against a £700-900
estimate. The highest price paid for a single Appliqué piece
in the sale was £4112 for the stunning Palermo plaque. A large
Plate section with average or below prices followed this, although a Poplar
made £705 and the perfect Orange Roof Cottage
was a high £940. After the high prices for Delecia Pansies
earlier the Biarritz seemed a bargain at £446. The interest in the
Heads
ofNations continues, the only example in the sale,
Egypt
made £1527. The final six lots were plates and plaques: the Appliqué
Avignon
plate made £2115, Red Melon and RedTulip plates
remained unsold, and the rare InspirationAutumn plaque was £2115
and the charger in Inspiration Caprice seemed reasonable at £2350.
Overall
the market was amazingly strong at this sale, given the smaller attendance.
If Christie’s had assembled more, perfect pieces, the market certainly
wants them, as not everyone was lucky enough to take something home with
them. It seems there are more buyers than sellers in the Clarice Cliff
world still, which has been the case for several years now…
Christie’s
Michael Jeffery commented ‘We were very pleased with the sale, with 84%
sold and some strong prices. We are looking forward to once again holding
two sales in 2001, in May and November.’
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