You might be newly curious about our nearly 260-year
old company...or perhaps your interest runs deeper, and you'd
like to take part in the captivating world of auctions...either
way, you've come to the right place.
Sotheby's:
A History
Masters at auction since 1744
On March 11, 1744, Samuel Baker, founder of Sotheby's,
held the first-ever sale under his own name. The library of
a certain Rt. Hon. Sir John Stanley, Bart. described as "containing
several Hundred scarce and valuable books in all branches of
Polite Literature" sold for a few hundred pounds. Well
over two centuries later, on December 6, 1983, Sotheby's sold
a single book, The Gospels of Henry the Lion, for more than
8 million pounds.
Since those early days, it is not just prices
that have grown considerably. So too have the scope and scale
of Sotheby's itself. Samuel Baker would hardly recognize his
old firm, were he to take a stroll down London's present day
New Bond Street - or, for that matter, down Manhattan's York
Avenue. It has only been in the last century, after all, that
the original London company has expanded from book auctions
to cover all areas of the fine and decorative arts. This great
expansion means that Sotheby's is not just one of the oldest
fine art auctioneers in the world, but also now the largest.
There are more than 100 Sotheby's offices around the world;
and, in 1998, auction sales produced a turnover of just under
$2 billion.
For more in-depth information on Sotheby's auction
house, including complete company history, the ins and outs
of auctions, terminology and more, please click
here to visit Sotheby's auction house on the web.
Tom Clements works in association with Sotheby's
International Realty
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