Ancient Sculpture and Works of Art Part II
Online Auction: 2–8 December 2021 • 4:00 PM GMT • London

Ancient Sculpture and Works of Art Part II 2–8 December 2021 • 4:00 PM GMT • London


R eturning to the auction calendar this December alongside the Part I live auction, Sotheby’s dedicated online sale of Ancient Sculpture & Works of Art will include a diverse selection of objects from the classical world, with a focus on accessible price points for both new and seasoned collectors. Highlights of this sale include additonal works from the collection of the late Antonin and Christiane Besse, as well as an examples of ancient glass, pottery and classical marbles.


Auction Highlights

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The Collection of the late Antonin and Christiane Besse

Christiane and Antonin Besse at their Ras Marshag residence in Aden, November 1967 (image credit: PAGES Francois / Contributor, Getty Images)


T his collection is a family story. It starts with our grandfather and an extraordinary odyssey which first took him from the French shores of the Mediterranean to the Gulf of Aden in South Arabia, or ancient Yemen, the legendary lands of the queen of Sheba. His trading empire developed from there, up the coast of the Arabian peninsula and across the African horn into Abyssinia. His love of the region is reflected in the family coat of arms which he designed when knighted in 1951: against the gold of the desert sands, a red star heralds distant lands. He also expressed it in the collection, which he began in the early part of last century. The British Museum is now the resting place of many objects he bequeathed*: funerary stelae carved with enigmatic Qatabanic symbols, sculpted alabaster heads that gaze out from empty eye sockets, and these astonishing bulls’ heads said to be associated with an ancient moon cult, but which in a poetic imagination might be the cattle of the sun-god upon which Odysseus’ companions feasted, thereby condemning themselves never to return home.

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Our grandfather did return home before his death in 1951; by then our father had taken over at the helm of A. Besse & Co and we were both born within the decade that followed in Aden’s British military hospital. The collection had grown, carefully nurtured under the auspices of our mother’s formidable erudition and intellect, not to speak of her almost uncanny foresight. After her death we uncovered in dusty archives export certificates she had obtained from the government of Aden in the early 1960s – rare documents indeed from the final years of the protectorate and which saved the collection from the revolution that ensued. We were still very young children then, and together with the collection, found safe harbour in Europe. Our parents relocated to Beirut where for a while they were able to continue indulging their passion for antiquities. The alabaster ibex, bulls and busts were joined by delicate roman glass in iridescent colours, a menagerie of small bronze animals, marble and stone statuary of goddesses, and mosaïques richly adorned with people and beasts and flowers but also Byzantine churches and inscriptions. All these came home too and populated our childhood homes, until the civil war in Lebanon brought to an end this last chapter of our parents' Middle Eastern odyssey. They lost many dear friends during the war, including archaeologists and antiquarians with whom they had carefully worked to curate their collection. From that time on, they no longer added to this collection.

Interior shot from Antonin and Christiane Besse's apartment

The antique object is time compressed, the physical witness of millennia traversed. But this very personal collection is also witness to a more immediate past, the extraordinary lives of our parents which sometimes took the form of an exile. Their real home was never as much the places in which they lived (Aden, Sanaa, Beirut, Addis Ababa, London, Paris…) as the collection itself. These objects together conjured up for them a sort of personal Ithaka, a world largely invisible to others which they always longed to return to. Now the objects in this collection must find a new place, integrate another’s space and continue their own journey.


*(see https://www.britishmuseum.org/collection/term/BIOG61976)

Antonin and Joy-Isabelle Besse
London, October 2021

Objects From the Classical World

The sale features a variety of works across media such as marble, glass, bronze and pottery from the ancient Mediterranean.

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Ancient Egyptian Sculpture

Ancient Egyptian art continues to fascinate the modern viewer. This sale includes a selection of Egyptian works of art from the dynastic period.

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