Suitcase trove for € 61,000*
Hermann Hesse Realizes Top Result in Hamburg Book Auction
Hamburg, 20 May, 2015, (kk) - With total proceeds of € 1.4 million* the two day auction of Rare Books at Ketterer Kunst in Hamburg on 18/19 May realized very good results. The evening auction alone achieved a sales quota of more than 80%. Around a dozen lots with manuscripts and watercolors by Hermann Hesse, which had recently been discovered in the estate of the Schadow family, were particularly in demand. For a total of € 61,200* they found new owners all over Germany.
The TOP 5 Lots

€ 61.000* starting price: € 28.040
numbers 108/109/954-963: Hermann Schedel
suitcase with manuscripts and watercolors

€ 43.000* starting price: € 16.000
no. 21: Conrad Gesner
De omni rerum fossilium genere. Zürich 1565-66


€ 37.000* starting price: € 11.000
no. 116: Serge Poliakoff
Parmènide. Vorzugsausgabe. 1964

€ 28.000*  starting price: € 25.000
no. 598: Johann Wilhelm Weinmann
Phythanthoza Iconographia. Regensburg 1737-45

€ 28.000* starting price: € 16.000
no. 159: Johann Baptist Homann
Sammelatlas. Nuremberg ca. 1725-1780

€ 23.000* starting price: € 7.200
no. 132: Edition MAT MOT
(Fluxus) 1964-67

€ 23.000* starting price: € 700
no. 64: Russland-Architektur
Peterhof 1853

 

Hesse_Koffer
Hermann Hesse
The suitcase, discovered in the estate of Walter and Nora Schadow contained several postcards, poems and texts with watercolors by the Nobel prize winner
Result: € 61.200*

Two special gems from the Hermann Hesse collection, lots 108 and 109, were part of the evening on the first auction day. While the original manuscript of the famous fairy tale "Piktor's Verwandlungen" rose from a starting price of € 12,000 to a result of € 18,000* and was sold to a Northern German art trader, the poem typescript with six feather drawings with watercolors was lifted to a result of € 16,800* by a new client from Southern Germany. Accordingly, the private collector made for a four-fold of the starting price of € 4,000.

Likewise interest was raised by Conrad Gesner and his "De omni rerum fossilium genere" (lot 21), for which 5 phone lines had been reserved. Next to German art traders, competitors from the Netherlands and the U.S.A. were also represented. Eventually, an American antiquarian stopped the race with a result of € 43,200*.

A German private collector made the only illustrated book by Serge Poliakoff, the de-luxe edition of Plato's "Parménide" (lot 116) sure for himself. With an offer of € 37,200* he did not only make for a three-fold of the starting price, but also stood his grounds against fierce competition from Swiss and British traders on the phones.

Third place in the list of desired objects is occupied by the Edition Mat Mot (lot 132, starting price: € 7,200) and the very nice and rare Collection of Russian Views of the rural region around Babigon between St. Petersburg and Peterhof Palace, the former summer residence of Peter the Great (lot 64, starting price: € 700). Both lots were sold for € 22,800* each and thus realized a multiple of their respective starting prices. While the first was sold to England, the latter went, not surprisingly, to Russia.

A Northern German art trader made sure that the punched gilt foil Leporello fold with dedication by Lucio Fontana (lot 114) realized the eighteen-fold of its starting price of € 600. With a result of € 10.800* he relegated competitors from Germany, England, Italy and the U.S.A. to places second and beyond.

In the section of Old Literature Karin Gyllenstierna's very rare devotional book "Geistliches Heil Pflaster, und Seelen-Artzney" (lot 67) is especially notable. The work, made in Riga in 1677, is the first prosaic work by a woman printed in Latvia. With a result of € 10,200* it realized a stunning 25-fold of the starting price of € 400. Eventually, a German trader outbid a Northern German library.

The auction of Maritime and Northern German Art, traditionally held in Hamburg right before the auction of Rare Books, also has some results worthwhile mentioning. Here is a small selection:
lot no. artist title starting price  result
1119 Friedrich Kallmorgen    Südamerika Dampfer im
Hamburger Hafen
€ 5.600 € 6.720*
1179 Arthur Illies Jacobi Kirchhof in Hamburg    € 4.000 € 6.240*

Remaining exciting objects can be acquired in the post auction sale until 19 June, 2015.

Since it was founded in 1954, Ketterer Kunst has been firmly established in the front ranks of auction houses dealing in fine art and rare books, with its headquarters in Munich and a branch in Hamburg. Gallery rooms in Berlin as well as representatives in Heidelberg, Duesseldorf and Modena (Italy) contribute substantially to the company's success. In addition, exhibitions, special theme and charity auctions as well as permanent online auctions on www.ketterer-internet-auctions.com are regular events at Ketterer Kunst.

* The rounded result is the hammer + 20 percent buyer’s premium

Your press contact: Your contact in the Rare Books department:
Ketterer Kunst Ketterer Kunst
Joseph-Wild-Str. 18 Holstenwall 5
81829 Munich, Germany 20355 Hamburg, Germany
Michaela Derra Christoph Calaminus / Christian Höflich
Phone: +49-(0)89-55244-152 Phone: +49-(0)40-374961-11 /-20
Fax: +49-(0)89-55244-177 Fax: +49-(0)40-374961-66
E-Mail: m.derra@kettererkunst.de E-Mail: infohamburg@kettererkunst.de