‘Rogues & Scholars’ dives into the midcentury London art market

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Art history in the post-World War II era is usually described as a period when the center of the art world moved from Europe to America as abstract expressionism took center stage in New York.

In “Rogues & Scholars: A History of the London Art World: 1945-2000,” author James Stourton, an art historian and a former chairman of Sotheby’s UK, discusses an equally important but far less recognized development – how postwar London briefly became the center of the global art market.

This is an absorbing story of how small dealers and experts were gradually replaced by large auction houses. Sotheby’s and Christie’s
both operated internationally and turned auctions into major events that were breathlessly covered by the media.

Why We Wrote This

Art sales used to be genteel affairs conducted by elite collectors and dealers. But two London auction houses brought glamour and media attention, changing the market forever.

After World War II, the London art and antiques markets were dominated by small shops “stuffed with a quality and quantity of goods almost inconceivable today,” Stourton writes. The treasures mostly came from the sale of country houses “and the unloading of 200 years of obsessive collecting by a once rich country that found itself much poorer and … in need of cash.” Many of these dealers had expertise in highly specialized fields, such as silver, Chinese porcelain, European ceramics, and even “pottery tomb sculpture,” which appealed to a small number of collectors.   

ROGUES & SCHOLARS: A History of the London Art World: 1945-2000, By James Stourton, Pegasus Books, 432 pp.

The art world changed in October 1958 with the sale of impressionist paintings owned by Jakob Goldschmidt, a legendary German collector at Sotheby’s in London. Lured by the status of the storied British auction houses and even more by the lower commissions charged to sellers, Goldschmidt’s heirs opted to sell the collection in London rather than in America.  

The sale was held at 9:30 p.m. – the first evening auction in two centuries. Attendees were asked to wear evening dress. Celebrities like Lady Churchill, Kirk Douglas, and W. Somerset Maugham took seats in the front row, and television cameras rolled. The art auction as an “event” was born. 

It was a huge success. The sale set a record for a single collection, totaling £781,000. That price looks fairly modest by today’s standards, but it was a blockbuster sale at the time. There was no doubt about the best place to buy and sell high-quality art. As The Christian Science Monitor had opined a year earlier, “London has become the centre of the art market.” 



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