Sale: 600 / Evening Sale, Dec. 05. 2025 in Munich
Lot 125001046
Lot 125001046
Frame image
125001046
George Grosz
Liebespaar, 1924.
Watercolor and ink pen
Estimate:
€ 180,000 - 250,000
$ 208,800 - 290,000
Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
George Grosz
1893 - 1959
Liebespaar. 1924.
Watercolor and ink pen.
Signed in the lower right. Titled "No 3 Liebespaar" on the reverse. On firm wove paper. 61 x 47.4 cm (24 x 18.6 in), size of sheet.
• Grosz par excellence.
• With a sharp line: the intimacy and absurdity of human relationships.
• A scathing critique of the church.
• With his scandalous subjects, Grosz became a sharp-witted moralist and satirist of the Weimar Republic.
• Grosz's works are in all of the leading international museums.
• Part of an acclaimed private collection in Berlin for over 40 years.
Accompanied by a photo certificate issued by Ralph Jentsch on October 21, 2025. This sheet will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of works on paper.
PROVENANCE: Artist's studioi.
Peter Deitsch Gallery, New York (1970).
Serge Sabarsky Gallery, New York (with a label on the back of the frame).
Saul P. Steinberg Collection, New York (until 1981: Christie`s).
Private collection, Berlin (acquired from the above in 1981, Christie's).
EXHIBITION: George Grosz. Berlin Drawings and Watercolors, Peter Deitsch Fine Arts, New York, March–April 1970, cat. no. 35 (with ill.)
George Grosz. Drawings and Watercolors, Serge Sabarsky Gallery, New York, May–June 1980. (With a cut-out label on the back of the frame. Illustrated on the invitation card).
LITERATURE: Christie’s, New York, The Saul P. Steinberg Collection: Important Modern Drawings and Watercolors, Part II, May 19, 1981, lot 133 (full-page color illustration).
1893 - 1959
Liebespaar. 1924.
Watercolor and ink pen.
Signed in the lower right. Titled "No 3 Liebespaar" on the reverse. On firm wove paper. 61 x 47.4 cm (24 x 18.6 in), size of sheet.
• Grosz par excellence.
• With a sharp line: the intimacy and absurdity of human relationships.
• A scathing critique of the church.
• With his scandalous subjects, Grosz became a sharp-witted moralist and satirist of the Weimar Republic.
• Grosz's works are in all of the leading international museums.
• Part of an acclaimed private collection in Berlin for over 40 years.
Accompanied by a photo certificate issued by Ralph Jentsch on October 21, 2025. This sheet will be included in the forthcoming catalogue raisonné of works on paper.
PROVENANCE: Artist's studioi.
Peter Deitsch Gallery, New York (1970).
Serge Sabarsky Gallery, New York (with a label on the back of the frame).
Saul P. Steinberg Collection, New York (until 1981: Christie`s).
Private collection, Berlin (acquired from the above in 1981, Christie's).
EXHIBITION: George Grosz. Berlin Drawings and Watercolors, Peter Deitsch Fine Arts, New York, March–April 1970, cat. no. 35 (with ill.)
George Grosz. Drawings and Watercolors, Serge Sabarsky Gallery, New York, May–June 1980. (With a cut-out label on the back of the frame. Illustrated on the invitation card).
LITERATURE: Christie’s, New York, The Saul P. Steinberg Collection: Important Modern Drawings and Watercolors, Part II, May 19, 1981, lot 133 (full-page color illustration).
George Grosz's depictions of society in the Weimar Republic are among the harshest analyses of the social reality of that time. In his paintings, drawings, and prints, the big city becomes a stage for moral decay, where sexuality, power, and economic hardship intertwine. With his sharp brush, he characterizes “Babylon Berlin” as a city dominated by money, corruption, and sexual hedonism. His subjects are often not only victims of social injustice, but also symptoms of a society with values marked by corruption, hypocrisy, and aggression.
The bourgeois couple as a character type in Grosz's art
With the print “Liebespaar” (Lovers), he lampoons the world of dubious pleasures. The bald, feisty man embodies the satiated bourgeois, exercising his power in economic and sexual forms. The scene presented here is titled “Liebespaar” (Lovers) on the reverse. Whether they are truly lovers or rather engaged in a transactional affair cannot be conclusively determined. This “couple” is certainly not necessarily married, as indicated by their ringless hands. The tête-à-tête is held in a cramped space; the woman has just been reading and was not prepared for such a demanding encounter from behind, and does not necessarily want to give in to him, but he grabs her buttocks and breasts.
George Grosz's depictions, such as “Liebespaar,” are not voyeuristic observations but rather descriptions of a society that fails to recognize its own paradoxes. The artist holds up a mirror to his audience—“in front of their grimaces,” as he himself said—and exposes the moral foundations of a world driven by capital and hypocrisy. With an analytical eye, Grosz creates an anatomy of desire without offering empathy or redemption. Human beings, with their lust and greed, are part of a system that no longer recognizes any moral authority. The old man gropes the woman, and behind him, the cross, symbol of Christianity, is degraded to a window cross. It is no coincidence that George Grosz chose to place this attribute so prominently in the scene. His intention here is not to depict a window, but a cross as a reference to the institution of the church.
For Grosz, the church is not a moral counterforce, but part of the power structure he so sharply criticizes.
“Lovers” – Reflection or counter-image to prostitution?
This confrontation with religion reveals Grosz’s central concern: he attacks not faith itself, but the institution that corrupts the actual content of the beliefs. In his works from this period, he depicts the church, the military, and the bourgeoisie as accomplices in a system that preaches morality while practicing exploitation.
His art attempts to use exaggeration and satire to reveal the structures that embed violence and hypocrisy in everyday life.
His works document the lasting question of how much hypocrisy a society can tolerate before it no longer recognizes itself. In this way, he becomes a visionary of German culture. He was able to leave Germany in 1932 shortly before Adolf Hitler seized power; his works were removed from museums and defamed as “degenerate art.” [KA/EH]
The bourgeois couple as a character type in Grosz's art
With the print “Liebespaar” (Lovers), he lampoons the world of dubious pleasures. The bald, feisty man embodies the satiated bourgeois, exercising his power in economic and sexual forms. The scene presented here is titled “Liebespaar” (Lovers) on the reverse. Whether they are truly lovers or rather engaged in a transactional affair cannot be conclusively determined. This “couple” is certainly not necessarily married, as indicated by their ringless hands. The tête-à-tête is held in a cramped space; the woman has just been reading and was not prepared for such a demanding encounter from behind, and does not necessarily want to give in to him, but he grabs her buttocks and breasts.
George Grosz's depictions, such as “Liebespaar,” are not voyeuristic observations but rather descriptions of a society that fails to recognize its own paradoxes. The artist holds up a mirror to his audience—“in front of their grimaces,” as he himself said—and exposes the moral foundations of a world driven by capital and hypocrisy. With an analytical eye, Grosz creates an anatomy of desire without offering empathy or redemption. Human beings, with their lust and greed, are part of a system that no longer recognizes any moral authority. The old man gropes the woman, and behind him, the cross, symbol of Christianity, is degraded to a window cross. It is no coincidence that George Grosz chose to place this attribute so prominently in the scene. His intention here is not to depict a window, but a cross as a reference to the institution of the church.
For Grosz, the church is not a moral counterforce, but part of the power structure he so sharply criticizes.
“Lovers” – Reflection or counter-image to prostitution?
This confrontation with religion reveals Grosz’s central concern: he attacks not faith itself, but the institution that corrupts the actual content of the beliefs. In his works from this period, he depicts the church, the military, and the bourgeoisie as accomplices in a system that preaches morality while practicing exploitation.
His art attempts to use exaggeration and satire to reveal the structures that embed violence and hypocrisy in everyday life.
His works document the lasting question of how much hypocrisy a society can tolerate before it no longer recognizes itself. In this way, he becomes a visionary of German culture. He was able to leave Germany in 1932 shortly before Adolf Hitler seized power; his works were removed from museums and defamed as “degenerate art.” [KA/EH]
125001046
George Grosz
Liebespaar, 1924.
Watercolor and ink pen
Estimate:
€ 180,000 - 250,000
$ 208,800 - 290,000
Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
Headquarters
Joseph-Wild-Str. 18
81829 Munich
Phone: +49 89 55 244-0
Fax: +49 89 55 244-177
info@kettererkunst.de
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
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
Cordula Lichtenberg
Gertrudenstraße 24-28
50667 Cologne
Phone: +49 221 510 908-15
infokoeln@kettererkunst.de
Hessen
Rhineland-Palatinate
Miriam Heß
Phone: +49 62 21 58 80-038
Fax: +49 62 21 58 80-595
infoheidelberg@kettererkunst.de
We will inform you in time.



