Sale: 600 / Evening Sale, Dec. 05. 2025 in Munich button next Lot 125001052

 

125001052
Hans Hartung
T1950-2, 1950.
Oil on canvas
Estimate:
€ 140,000 - 200,000

 
$ 162,400 - 232,000

Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
Hans Hartung
1904 - 1989

T1950-2. 1950.
Oil on canvas.
Signed and dated in the lower left. Inscribed with the artist's name and address on the reverse on the folded canvas. 65 x 81 cm (25.5 x 31.8 in).

• Controlled spontaneity: an outstanding piece of European Informalism.
• A masterful fusion of light and shadow, dynamic energy, color, and texture.
• Hartung's works from the 1950s are among his most sought-after pieces on the international auction market.
• Other paintings from this creative period can be found in the collections of major international museums, including the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the Guggenheim Museum, and the Museum of Modern Art in New York.
• Formerly in the important American École de Paris collection of Genia and Charles Zadok.
• Part of an important Berlin private collection for over 40 years
.

The work is registered in the archive of the Fondation Hans Hartung et Anna-Eva Bergman, Antibes, and will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné.

PROVENANCE: Galerie Lydia Conti, Paris (with a handwritten inscription on the stretcher).
Collection of Genia (1900–1988) and Charles Zadok (1896–1984), Milwaukee / New York (at least since 1955).
Private collection, Berlin (acquired in 1983, Sotheby's, London).

EXHIBITION: Anglo-French Exhibits, New Burlington Galleries, London, 1950
The School of Paris at Mid-Century. A Selection of Modern Paintings from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Zadok, Arts Club of Chicago, Chicago, May 1 - June 6, 1952, cat. no. 25 (titled "Composition – Dark Blue Background with Yellow Circle", with the exhib. label on the stretcher, dated "1.5.-15.6.1952").
Art in the 20th Century (Commemorating the Tenth Anniversary of the Signing of the United Nations Charter), San Francisco Museum of Art, San Francisco, June 17 - July 10, 1955, p. 13 (titled "Blue Composition", with the exhibition label on the stretcher).
School of Paris, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, April 5 - May 17, 1959 (not in cat., with the exhibition label on the stretcher).

LITERATURE: Sotheby's, London, Modern and Contemporary Art 1945-1983, December 8, 1983, p. 17, lot 613 (illustrated in color in vertical alignment on p. 16).

“T1950-2” was created in 1950 and marks the beginning of a decade that was to become a crucial phase in Hans Hartung’s artistic development. In the 1950s, he rose to prominence as one of the leading representatives of European Informalism. Shortly before, he had his first solo exhibition at the legendary Lydia Conti Gallery in Paris, the collection from which our work originally comes. During this period, Hartung established contacts with artists such as Mark Rothko and Willi Baumeister, and his works increasingly found their way into leading private collections, such as those of Ottomar Domnick and Genia and Charles Zadok.
Our work “T1950-2” was part of the Zadok collection for around three decades. In 1952, the work was shown in Chicago as part of an exhibition featuring other pieces from this collection. Further exhibitions in the 1950s demonstrate that this masterfully reduced work is an outstanding example of Hartung's dynamic use of light and shadow as well as of color and form. The artist creates an atmosphere of blue and gray tones in the background, embedding black lines and blotchy structures within it. With the floating forms in the open pictorial space, he creates an almost weightless effect that guides the viewer's eye into distant celestial spaces and lends the composition a dreamlike, meditative depth. It is this kind of controlled spontaneity that characterizes his work in the years that follow.
Hans Hartung leads an eventful life until his career takes off after World War II. Born in Leipzig in 1904, he became interested in non-representational art while still in school and created abstract compositions using lines and blots. According to his own statements, he processed childhood impressions of thunderstorms and lightning in these works. In 1925, he encountered the works of Wassily Kandinsky, which inspired him to study painting in Leipzig, Dresden, and Munich. From 1935 onwards, Hartung lived in Paris, where he initially worked under difficult personal and financial circumstances. During World War II, he fought for the French side, was imprisoned several times, and even lost a leg in combat in 1944. In recognition of his services, he was granted French citizenship in 1946. France remained his home until he died in Antibes in 1989.
Throughout his life, Hartung remained distant from representational art. He always sought a free, immediate form of expression—a controlled gesture between chance and composition. “T1950-2” is an early and impressive testimony to this search for painterly freedom. [AW]



125001052
Hans Hartung
T1950-2, 1950.
Oil on canvas
Estimate:
€ 140,000 - 200,000

 
$ 162,400 - 232,000

Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.

 


Munich
Headquarters
Joseph-Wild-Str. 18
81829 Munich
Phone: +49 89 55 244-0
Fax: +49 89 55 244-177
info@kettererkunst.de
Hamburg
Louisa von Saucken / Undine Schleifer
Holstenwall 5
20355 Hamburg
Phone: +49 40 37 49 61-0
Fax: +49 40 37 49 61-66
infohamburg@kettererkunst.de
Berlin
Dr. Simone Wiechers / Nane Schlage
Fasanenstr. 70
10719 Berlin
Phone: +49 30 88 67 53-63
Fax: +49 30 88 67 56-43
infoberlin@kettererkunst.de
Cologne
Cordula Lichtenberg
Gertrudenstraße 24-28
50667 Cologne
Phone: +49 221 510 908-15
infokoeln@kettererkunst.de
Baden-Württemberg
Hessen
Rhineland-Palatinate

Miriam Heß
Phone: +49 62 21 58 80-038
Fax: +49 62 21 58 80-595
infoheidelberg@kettererkunst.de
Never miss an auction again!
We will inform you in time.

 
Subscribe to the newsletter now >

© 2025 Ketterer Kunst GmbH & Co. KG Privacy policy