Look in your drawers. There may be something small, yet really valuable in them.

Reading a story in Christie’s Magazine last week, I was reminded of a time, a decade or so ago, when Jacob and I were deep-cleaning the house and realized that to clear some storage space we had to get rid of a lot of little “stuff” we didn’t use and weren’t fond of. During that knicknack purge, we discovered that we had a valuable, wee treasure that had been in hiding in our families’ care for who knows how long.

The Christie’s article began:

“It is rare that something of this quality appears from out of nowhere,” says Christie’s Old Masters specialist Milo Dickinson. “That it was found in a box of odds and ends in South Africa is a lesson to us all that there ae still many great works hidden away, ready to be discovered.” And, with those few words, I was hooked.

A retired couple liked to go to auctions and from time-to-time buy box-lots of knickknacks. They bought a box online (photo right) for around $15 from an eBay-type auction platform called Bidorbuy. When they recieved the box they found, among the other objects, a 5-inch-high statuette of a peasant resting on a staff.

Described in the auction inventory as a “brass ornament,” their little metal casting was offered as part of a box containing other miscellaneous items including an airplane-shaped shelf,  a pair of glass vases, and a decanter.

According to Christie’s, after bringing the box home the couple, who were living in South Africa, began to research the peasant sculpture online, but they couldn’t find anything like it. After further investigation ended up cold, they made a connection that resulted in startling headway. They contacted Gillian Scott-Berning, a Christie’s consultant in South Africa, who in turn reached out to Dickinson in London.

Dickinson instantly recognized it to be a lost work by Antonio Susini (1558-1624), a Florentine sculptor widely considered today to be the finest bronze caster of the Renaissance.

With three days left in the online auction, the current bid is approximately $30,240.

The full story is fascinating. You can learn more from Christie’s and The Evening Standard. The box-lot bronze will be offered in the Old Master Paintings & Sculpture sale that’s online from July 9-30. The sale is part of Christie’s wider Classic Week in London which is now held over the whole month of July.

While the hammer price of the Susini has already eclipsed what we received for our little found object, when all’s said and done, the couple can’t possibly be more excitied than Jacob and I were as we watched our three-inch-round discovery climb—in the final hour of bidding on eBay—to $14,101.

 

By Stephen Brockelman

As a Sr. Writer at T. Rowe Price, I work with a group of the best copywriters around. We belong to the broader creative team within Enterprise Creative, a part of Corporate Marketing Services. _____________________________________________ A long and winding road: My path to T. Rowe Price was more twisted than Fidelity’s green line. With scholarship in hand, I left Kansas at 18 to study theatre in New York. When my soap opera paychecks stopped coming from CBS and started coming from the show’s sponsor, Proctor & Gamble, I discovered the power of advertising and switched careers. Over the years I’ve owned an ad agency in San Francisco; worked for Norman Lear on All in the Family, Good Times, Sanford and Son, and the rest of his hit shows; and as a member of Directors Guild of America, I directed Desi Arnaz in his last television appearance— we remained friends until his death. In 1988 I began freelancing full time didn’t look back. In January 2012 my rep at Boss Group called and said, “I know you don’t want to commute and writing for the financial industry isn’t high on your wish list, but I have a gig with T. Rowe Price in Owings Mills…” I was a contractor for eight months, drank the corporate Kool-Aid, became a TRP associate that August, and today I find myself smiling more often than not.

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