–
Psyche showing her Sisters her Gifts from Cupid After university, Carritt worked for himself as an art dealer, and wrote on art for the
Burlington Magazine, the
Evening Standard, and
The Spectator. According to
The Independent, Sewell "conceived a violent dislike of Carritt, a colleague who committed the dual sins of being a better connoisseur and a Rugbeian". At a "heavily attended auction" of works from
Lord Rosebery's
Mentmore Towers collection in 1977, Carritt realised that
The Toilet of Venus, attributed to
Carle van Loo, a minor painter, was a painting by
Jean-Honoré Fragonard,
Psyche Showing her Sisters her Gifts from Cupid. He bought it for £8,000 (or about $14,000), and in 1978 it was acquired by London's
National Gallery for £495,000. At the cottage of Joan, Lady Baird, he discovered an unrecorded painting by
Rogier van der Weyden, which is now in London's
National Gallery. ==Personal life==