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#7 | |
Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: USA Georgia
Posts: 1,599
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![]() Quote:
There was a nice Balinese keris with an ivory wrongko that was completely apart. Wrongko over there, pendok beside it and blade with handle beside it. I asked the workers why they left it that way and they said they did not know how it should be out together. They did not display the actual item when the auctioneer was callling, just a picture on a monitor. I would venture to say that there may be some unhappy people when they get their items. Hope they do a good job of packing and shipping mine. I am a bit apprehensive. Let me hasten to say that there were many nice ivory carvings that they took very good care to preserve. The good stuff was behind glass. You had to ask to handle a piece and there were a couple of quiet guys in suits with earpieces and the curly wires going down into their collars, watching. It was mainly the "tribal" pieces that were piled on tables. They were not that expert in 'tribal.' For instance the Skinner expert thought that the Batak were from Borneo. But his specialty was probably other areas, Don't see why he tried to pretend to know everything. But I guess that is how it is. All in all Skinner is a good auction house, but this auction was for Asian art, not edged weapons. Saw a cup carved from a rhino horn bring $37,500. |
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