Kan inte nå servern
Temaauktioner online
Systembolagets Dryckesauktion – december D064
Auktion:
Helsinki Winter Sale F504
Auktion:
Selected Gifts E1128
Auktion:
John Bauer F567
Auktion:
Restaurang Frantzén – Glas E1133
Auktion:
Sculptures Selected F572
Auktion:
Fashion Winter Edition E1050
Auktion:
Swedish Modern Lighting – Winter Edition E1095
Auktion:
Post-War Design F538
Auktion:
201
1558895

Krans, guld, sannolikt Hellenistisk, ca. 300 f.Kr.

Utropspris
100 000 - 200 000 SEK
8 890 - 17 800 EUR
9 170 - 18 300 USD
Köpinformation
Vad kostar transporten?

Frakt kan endast beställas genom att kontakta specialdelivery@bukowskis.com.

För konditionsrapport kontakta specialist
Alexander Johansson
Stockholm
Alexander Johansson
Assisterande specialist konsthantverk
+46 (0)707 88 84 71
Krans, guld, sannolikt Hellenistisk, ca. 300 f.Kr.

Tvådelad. I form av flikiga blad och blommor. Yttre diameter ca 21 cm. Vikt ca 88 gram.

Proveniens

Förvärvad av industrimannen och storsamlaren Carl Kempe (1884-1967)
Carl Kempes (1884-1967) samling.
Inventarienummer CK88.
Därefter i arv.

Övrig information

Gold from the Carl Kempe collection.
The Swedish industrialist Carl Kempe (1884-1967) was a leading figure of the Swedish pulp and paper industry, as well as an accomplished tennis player who won a silver medal at the 1912 Summer Olympics in Stockholm. Today he is better known internationally as a famed collector of Chinese antiquities of all sorts. Always an avid collector (he described himself as a manic collector) Carl Kempe, towards the end of his life, from the 1950´s onward expanded his interests and started to collect gold objects from the Mediterranean area at a large scale. As with his acquisition of Chinese objects, most seems to have been bought in London through dealers and agents and were later displayed at his residence at Ekolsund Castle. In contrast with his Chinese collection this late formed collection was never so fully researched before Kempe passed away 1967. The objects now on offer, spans geographically from Italy to Egypt and have remained with Kempe family – and are now offered for sale by the family