A Chinese vase valued between 500 and 800 Swiss francs (or £382 to £611) has sold for a record five million Swiss francs (£3.8 million), a Geneva auction house said.
According to the catalogue, the vase, which is 23in tall and depicts three blue dragons on a yellow background, is from the 20th century but it bears an unverified mark from the 18th century Qianlong era.
There was a bidding battle at the auction on Thursday by two people who believed the vase was in fact from the 18th century.
The auctioneer at the Geneve-Encheres auction house said the age of the vase was difficult to evaluate accurately and that they tended to be conservative in their estimates.
“This is the hammer price so with the commission added it is a total of 6.08 million Swiss francs ($6.1 million, 5.1 million euros),” auctioneer Olivier Fichot told AFP.
The final price was 10,000 times more than the catalogue estimate.
The buyer, an amateur from Asia, was in the room for the auction, while his competitor bid by telephone.
Fichot said that it was the highest bid ever made in Geneva outside of jewellery and watches.
The auction house’s previous record was a bronze Buddha statue that sold for 550,000 Swiss francs.
5 most expensive art works sold at auction in Europe
Walking Man, Alberto Giacometti – £65 million (2010)
The Massacre of the Innocents, Peter Paul Rubens – £49.5 million (2002)
Bauerngarten, Gustav Klimt – £47.9 million (2017)
Lot and his Daughters, Peter Paul Rubens – £44.8 million (2016)
Femme Assise, Pablo Picasso – £43.2 million (2016)
Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk
Qing dynasty?
“Including the commission, the vase will cost the Asian buyer CHF6.08 million,” auctioneer Olivier Fichot told the AFP news agency.
The 60cm high vase with three blue dragons on a yellow background was listed in the catalogue as originating from the beginning of the 20th century with a fake 18th century Qianlong seal.
Two people competing in the bidding war dated the vase from the time of the Qing dynasty, under emperor Qianlong. However, Fichot cautioned the bidders that the vase was difficult to date.
The object was part of a Geneva collection of Asian art auctioned off on Thursday.
According to Fichot, it was the highest auction price achieved in Geneva by the auction house, apart from jewellery and watches. A bronze Buddha worth CHF550,000 held the previous record.