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Suzanne Perrault

Details

Rago/Wright/LAMA/Toomey & Co.
Lambertville, NJ
Toured In
3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 26, 27, 28, 29
Phone
609-397-9374
Fax
609-397-9377

Suzanne Perrault was born in St. Hyacinthe, Quebec, and received her bachelor's degree in English literature from McGill University in Montreal.

Ms. Perrault has been involved in the arts and crafts field since 1986. She worked for Barton Kaplan Antiques in New York until the gallery's closing in 1987. She then became a self-employed dealer and freelancer for David Rago in New York until 1991. She has been principal auction cataloguer since 1991, and manager of the Perrault-Rago Gallery to date.

She founded the New York Decorative Ceramics Society in 1994, a nonprofit organization aiming to teach about art pottery by visiting important collections in museums, private residences, and galleries. Ms. Perrault also curated an exhibition at Gustav Stickley's Craftsman Farms museum, "Women's Work: The Role of Women in the Arts & Crafts Movement," June 7-October 6, 1996.

Her interest in tiles started with the walls of the New York subway system and led to research for an article in the Arts & Crafts Quarterly (now Style: 1900). Ms. Perrault curated the first yearly all-tile exhibition and sale at the Lambertville gallery in 1994, and put together a show of the tiles of Harris Strong (complete with Mr. Harris Strong) within the confines of New York's Triple Pier Show, February 25-26, 1995.

Ms. Perrault wrote a chapter on tiles in American Art Pottery by David Rago, and co-wrote the introductory chapter of American Art Tile by Norman Karlson. She co-wrote Miller's American Art Pottery: Treasure or Not? with David Rago in 2001. She is a frequent contributor to Schroeder's Antiques Price Guide, as well as to many other publications. She lectures across the country on various topics and is a principal auctioneer at the Rago Arts and Auction Center.

Ms. Perrault has been a tile and pottery appraiser for ANTIQUES ROADSHOW since its first season.

ANTIQUES ROADSHOW is an antiques appraisal event and television production; we do not buy or sell objects, and conducting any business with an appraiser at the ANTIQUES ROADSHOW event is strictly forbidden.

If you decide to do business with an appraiser who has appeared on ANTIQUES ROADSHOW, please keep in mind these tips before consigning or selling an item:

  • Get more than one referral and check references
  • Get valuations of your item from more than once source
  • Compare options between different types of sellers, i.e., a dealer versus an auction house
  • If you are considering consigning an object for auction, be sure to inquire how the item will be priced, the size of the fee, and the expected amount of time the process may take. Find out what will happen if it doesn't sell.
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ANTIQUES ROADSHOW’s pool of experts are professionals with a wide range of experience in the antiques, fine art and collectibles community, and they are from a diverse background of auctioneers, dealers and appraisers.

All ROADSHOW appraisers are independent volunteers who donate their time and expertise to PBS and who pay their own expenses to be on the show. All business transactions are independent from ANTIQUES ROADSHOW.