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Twin of rare Imperial Chinese bowl due to go up for auction in Canterbury Auction Galleries after six-figure sale

Auctioneer Cliona Kilroy with Pheasant bowl.
Auctioneer Cliona Kilroy with Pheasant bowl.

Auctioneer Cliona Kilroy with the rare bowl

A rare piece of porcelain is due to go under the hammer today - after its identical twin sold for £195,000.

The matching Imperial Chinese bowl was part of a collection formerly owned by retired businessman Tony Evans, from Charing.

It sold at The Canterbury Auction Galleries (TCAG) last May as part of a £900,000 lot.

Mr Evans and his wife, Anne, sat in the saleroom watching dumbstruck as pieces they had prized for 40 years sold for far more than expected.

The six-inch Imperial porcelain bowl decorated with pheasants, which was estimated to go for between £8,000 and £12,000, sold for a staggering £195,000.

Astonishingly, the family has since "found" its pair, which is due to be sold at TCAG today.

Mr Evans said: "A few days after the sale, my father suddenly announced that he thought there might have been a pair of the bowls. He had forgotten completely.

"He's such a collector he would never knowingly split a pair, but I recalled him giving me a piece of porcelain sometime in the 1980s. I put it in a cupboard for safekeeping and simply forgot about it. It's just as well the way things have worked out.

"My father kept meticulous records of his purchases, but the bowls were not listed and he had no recollection of how much he had paid for them.

"No one could have known back then how important they would become.

"I've decided to sell it not because I need the money, but because I'm anxious about having something so valuable in the house."

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