LONDON.- Christies London announced the sale of Finch & Cos Cabinet of Curiosities. This eclectic collection sale spans thousands of years of history, comprising Antiquities, European Sculpture and Objects, alongside Tribal and Ethnographic Art, Natural History and Topographical pictures. In 96 lots, the sale unites historically and geographically important objects and curiosities from around the globe, including a Chinese scholars wrist rest, a Spanish Colonial (South American) parquetry cabinet, Mughal Indian flasks and a North Indian Bezoar stone case, a Japanese hand cannon, Victorian Halleys Comet brooches, Tibetan objects and Victorian portraits.
This sale celebrates the achievements of the London-based dealers, Jan and Craig Finch of Finch & Co, who for the past 30 years, have been advising and engaging with collectors, with a unique eye for thought-provoking works and objects, representative of cultures from around the world.
Finch & Co seek to create the greatest of 21st century 'cabinets of curiosities' to inspire and educate todays collectors in the same vein as Kunstkammern did with previous generations. Each lot in the sale reveals a fascinating story, individually representing an insight into the extraordinary, a discovery of the unusual, a thought-provoking escape from reality, an oddity to contemplate in an increasingly mechanised inhuman world and strives to transport clients into one where creativity and imagination are in harmony.
Cabinets of curiosities were first conceived in the 16th century as Cabinets of Wonder and collections of notable objects. The terminology cabinet originally described a room as opposed to a piece of furniture. These collectors rooms were microcosms of the universe, displaying their creators interest in understanding and ordering a fast-expanding world and also served as status symbols in society, with the most famous Wunderkammern created by royalty and the aristocracy.
Changing collecting tastes are behind the resurgence of interest in cabinets of curiosities, embraced by Finch & Co. They are synonymous with an international client base of connoisseurs and collectors, thanks to their individualistic approach to sourcing only the most extraordinary objects and curiosities.
Caitlin Yates, Specialist and Head of Sale, Private & Iconic Collections comments, Finch & Co is a brand that has successfully transcended the vagaries of taste throughout the past 30 years. It is the manifestation of two maverick minds that favour the antique, but appeal to the contemporary market. In a bland is grand era, Finch and Co is distinguished by its contrasting aesthetic. Still regarded as an outlier, it is this quality of otherness that makes the Finch & Co collection universal in its appeal. Having gained several modern artists as important clients, who, interestingly, privately collect antiques and ancient art, Finchs aesthetic is undeniably timeless.
Craig Finch comments, We have to dare to be different, throw off our fear of change and embrace Britains fantastic mix of cultures. This is the Finch motto. Craig continues, One of my personal highlights is a pair of Roman marble shoulders. Their sense of unending history and their achievement of self-aggrandisement through two thousand years of time marks them out for me amongst so many unique objects in the sale that will be bought by clients with a similar yearning to Jan and I for the extraordinary and unusual.
Jan Finch has selected the polychromed and parcel-gilded poplar wood bust of Mary Magdalene, (estimate £6,000-10,000), as one of her outstanding lots, A beautiful image with her adoring face turned to look at Christ on the cross. It is notably poignant to her because Mary Magdalene is one of the most controversial women in the history of Christianity. During the 16th and 17th centuries artists presented the Magdalen as a sensual almost classical Venus like figure, Jan Finch comments Each time I look at this sculpture I am moved by the power of the emotions shown.
Estimates range from £300 to £50,000 and the sale is expected to realise in the region of £300,000-460,000.
A exhibition view will take place at Christies King Street from 29 October 4 November 2020.