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This Boy Bought Painting for $2 — Suprised After Antiques Roadshow Expert Tells Its Value



This young boy is among the youngest collectors to appear on Antiques Roadshow. He brought along a paint he bought for $2. Of course, the view his face when he uncovered the real worth was too valuable!

Antiques Roadshow is a tv show where appraisers take a trip to different cities and also evaluate art, furniture, or precious jewelry generated by regional individuals. It first broadcast in Britain in 1979 as well as is still running today. The program has grown so prominent that TELEVISION layouts were introduced in Australia, Canada, Finland, Germany, Sweden, and also the USA.

The United States variation of Antiques Roadshow premiered in 1997 and follows a similar layout where the specialists travel from city to city. In 2014, the program mosted likely to Richmond, where a young child satisfied David Weiss, who specializes in paints, prints, sculpture, as well as Asian rugs.

The child is a collection agency of glass, sterling silver, as well as art. He primarily discovers the things at a local auction home in his community and after that sells them online.

Weiss appeared impressed with how the boy buys and sells silver, keeping a careful eye on market prices. After that Weiss asked the kid concerning the painting he brought with him that day.


“This piece was found at an auction down in South Jersey,” the boy said. “It was so hot there my dad didn’t want to stay to get it, but I wanted to. So we waited an hour or so. We got it for $2.”

“I thought it was a watercolor, but we couldn’t tell because of the UV glass,” he added.

“You’re right, it’s a watercolor,” Weiss answered.

Weiss then turned his attention to the signature on the painting.


“I only know Albert,” the boy said about the legibility of the signature.

“Albert is the first part of the name,” Weiss shared. “And this part, is Neuhuys.”


Albert Neuhuys was a Dutch painter born in 1844 and died in 1914. Looking at the boy’s painting, Weiss believes it was painted in the last quarter of the 19th century.

Neuhuys, along with many other Dutch painters, often painted scenes of a mother with a child or two children depicting everyday family life.

After sharing some background about the painter, Weiss asked the boy what he thought his painting was worth.


“A hundred and fifty bucks,” the boy replied.

Well, Weiss told him it was definitely worth that amount and a bit more. If the painting were put up for auction today, Weiss estimated the selling price between $1,000 to $1,500.

The boy’s eyes lit up in disbelief.



“Whoa!” he said, and then gestured an explosion coming from his right ear. “Boosh!”

“Not bad for $2,” Weiss told the boy. “So, I think you got a great career going as an art dealer. You should keep at it.”

“I think I’m gonna be rich,” the boy said with a huge smile.

Well, considering his $2 investment already returned almost a thousand times over, he’s off to a great start.

Watch the video to see the young boy’s priceless reaction:




Source: ntd

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