That bowl is magnificent. Absolutely beautiful and the artwork is just stunning. The artist has put so much love and care into the painting and it shows.
@@justwondering1967 I thought the same as you, but notice at the end of the video it says it was recently auctioned. The video is posted by the auction house. In other comments here the auction house has reported the sale price. I don't know why it was so low
@Chris Gilbert Utter nonsense. No piece of famille rose export porcelain of that period was EVER sold anywhere near those prices. You're just guessing at those numbers. Wrongly
@@sophitsa79 Auction prices rarely reflect retail value. It might be considered a bargain compared to what it would cost at a high end retail store but it was no give away at the auction price.
@@ZeeuwsVeilinghuis The size is extraordinary. €5500 was a good deal for the buyer. Not a give away, but pieces of that size and quality are few and far between.
Much more , Chinese weren't as rich in 1996 and the internet had just started. Today with ppl being able to see what's coming up for auction on the internet you get the entire world competing with each other. Plus there is a push from the chinese government and cultural organisations to repurchase chinese antiques of historical importance so a lot of money is getting pumped into that market. On the down side the Japanese market has gone down since the 80s , and European is stagnant for the most part except modern art .
@@VideoNOLA Well I think its quite an outdated word and i rarely if ever hear it used in conversation in the UK but I don't think people in the UK view it with the same racist connotations that Americans do. Seeing as it literally just means from the East.
@@MrBiggiefuckinsmalls Certainly so, as you say. On a side note, it's always worth a titter when one hears the UK "homely" to describe, say, one's handsome abode. Here in the US, one would say "homey" instead; for us, "homely" means unkempt or ugly.
They talk about value in guilders, so it's at least before the Euro was introduced in 1999. Judging from the haircut, moustache and glasses to my expertly opinion it could be late eighties, but the video quality is a bit too good for that, so I would conclude it is probably early to mid nineties.
A quick Google search: "Bijzonder is bijvoorbeeld deze ‘punch-bowl’ (zie video) die op 28 april 1996 te zien was bij het BBC programma Antiques Road Show. Het programma werd toen opgenomen in Amsterdam. De taxateur beschrijft de kom o.a. als ‘a wonderful piece with a superb design’." April 1996 it is.