JANET
CARLILE | | Janet
Carlile is an independent, accredited antiques valuer and appraiser. She has thirty
years of experience appraising, inventorying and advising on fine art and antiques
for private, corporate and institutional clients in North America and Europe.
Her particular expertise is in Europe and Canadian fine art, furniture and decorative
arts and she is regularly consulted by an international auction house on Canadian
silver and furniture. Janet is also well known as a university lecturer, author,
television personality and public speaker. |
| | Janet
has been retained by Canada's top museums, including the Canadian
Museum of Civilization and the Redpath
Museum as well as public institutions that hold or manage collections
of antiques or significant cultural assets, such as Rideau
Hall, the House of
Commons, the Department
of Canadian Heritage, the University of Alberta and the Court of Appeal.
Her clients also include insurance companies, embassies, private sector corporations
and individual collectors. |
| Janet's
qualifications include a first degree in Canadian History from the University
of Waterloo in Canada and a Master's Degree in Modern Social History from Lancaster
University in England. She completed the Decorative Arts Course at Sotheby's
Institute of Art which included working in appraisals and research
at the Victoria and Albert Museum in London. |
| She
is an accredited member of the Canadian Professional Appraisers/Canadian Association
of Personal Property Appraisers and her client reports conform to the Uniform
Standards of Professional Appraisal Practice (USPAP) of The Appraisal
Foundation. |
| Through
her network of contracts with specialists and auction houses across North America
and Europe, Janet maintains a current knowledge of values and trends - essential
in a market which is affected greatly by demand from foreign buyers. Janet is
not, however, a dealer and considers it a conflict of interest to purchase directly
from her clients. |
| In
addition to her appraisal work, Janet has been a lecturer at Lancaster University
on the subject of artefacts and implements relating to Georgian, Victorian and
Edwardian social history, and she has lectured about Canadian antiques at the
University of Toronto, Centennial College and Erindale College. She has written
about antiques and fine art for a variety of publications and appeared regularly
on radio and television. In Britain, she wrote and hosted a long-running BBC Radio
program called A-Z of Antiques, while in Canada she may be best known for her
multiple tours with the very successful Canadian Antiques Roadshow. Most recently she was invited to give a keynote address on Canadian Furniture design during the British Colonial Period at the New Zealand Furniture History Symposiumj in Invercargill |
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