Sale: 606 / Evening Sale, June 12. 2026 in Munich → Lot 126000066
126000066
Paula Modersohn-Becker
Sitzendes Mädchen mit blauem Hut und Blume in der rechten Hand, Um 1903.
Oil on cardboard
Estimate:
€ 100,000 - 150,000
$ 115,000 - 172,500
Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
126000066
Paula Modersohn-Becker
Sitzendes Mädchen mit blauem Hut und Blume in der rechten Hand, Um 1903.
Oil on cardboard
Estimate:
€ 100,000 - 150,000
$ 115,000 - 172,500
Information on buyer's premium, taxation and resale right compensation will be available four weeks before the auction.
Paula Modersohn-Becker
1876 - 1907
Sitzendes Mädchen mit blauem Hut und Blume in der rechten Hand. Um 1903.
Oil on cardboard.
Monogrammed in the lower left corner. Inscribed “Mädchen mit blauem Hut Otto Modersohn” by Otto Modersohn on the reverse at a later date. 32.4 x 23.3 cm (12.7 x 9.1 in).
The drawings and compositional studies that preceded this painting are “Sitzendes Mädchen mit Hut, eine Blume haltend” (Seated Girl with a Hat, Holding a Flower, ca. 1903) and “Mädchen mit Hut, eine Blume in der erhobenen rechten Hand haltend” (Girl with a Hat, Holding a Flower in Her Raised Right Hand, ca. 1903); cf. Anne Röver-Kann, Wolfgang Werner, and Rebecca Duckwitz, Paula Modersohn-Becker. Catalogue raisonné of hand drawings, vol. 1: Zeichnungen, Munich 2023, CR number E IV/131, E IV/132, and E IV/133. [CH].
• Along with her self-portraits, her children's portraits are among her key works, which are highly sought after on the international auction market.
• Part of the same private collection for 65 years.
• Closely related to the well-known paintings “Bust of a Girl with a Blue Hat and Flower” (Berkeley Art Museum) and “Head of a Blonde Girl with a Straw Hat” (Von der Heydt Museum, Wuppertal).
• From Bremen to New York: In 2024/25, Modersohn-Becker’s first museum retrospective in the U.S. took place (Neue Galerie, New York / Chicago Art Institute).
• 150th Birthday: In 2026, the artist will be honored with highly anticipated exhibitions, including “Becoming Paula” at the Museen Böttcherstraße in Bremen and “Paula Modersohn-Becker and Edvard Munch” at the Albertinum in Dresden.
PROVENANCE: Estate of the artist, Worpswede/Fischerhude.
Collection of Ernst Friedrich (Ernesto) Blohm, Caracas, Venezuela (acquired in 1961, Hauswedell, Hamburg).
In the family’s possession ever since.
LITERATURE: Günter Busch, Milena Schicketanz, Wolfgang Werner, Paula Modersohn-Becker 1876–1907. Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings, vol. II, Munich 1998, CR no. 392 (illustrated in black and white on p. 275).
- -
Dr. Ernst Hauswedell Buch- und Kunstantiquariat, Hamburg, 105th auction, Graphik, Handzeichnungen, Bilder, Plastik, June 5, 1961, lot 714 (illustrated on plate IV, dated “c. 1906”).
1876 - 1907
Sitzendes Mädchen mit blauem Hut und Blume in der rechten Hand. Um 1903.
Oil on cardboard.
Monogrammed in the lower left corner. Inscribed “Mädchen mit blauem Hut Otto Modersohn” by Otto Modersohn on the reverse at a later date. 32.4 x 23.3 cm (12.7 x 9.1 in).
The drawings and compositional studies that preceded this painting are “Sitzendes Mädchen mit Hut, eine Blume haltend” (Seated Girl with a Hat, Holding a Flower, ca. 1903) and “Mädchen mit Hut, eine Blume in der erhobenen rechten Hand haltend” (Girl with a Hat, Holding a Flower in Her Raised Right Hand, ca. 1903); cf. Anne Röver-Kann, Wolfgang Werner, and Rebecca Duckwitz, Paula Modersohn-Becker. Catalogue raisonné of hand drawings, vol. 1: Zeichnungen, Munich 2023, CR number E IV/131, E IV/132, and E IV/133. [CH].
• Along with her self-portraits, her children's portraits are among her key works, which are highly sought after on the international auction market.
• Part of the same private collection for 65 years.
• Closely related to the well-known paintings “Bust of a Girl with a Blue Hat and Flower” (Berkeley Art Museum) and “Head of a Blonde Girl with a Straw Hat” (Von der Heydt Museum, Wuppertal).
• From Bremen to New York: In 2024/25, Modersohn-Becker’s first museum retrospective in the U.S. took place (Neue Galerie, New York / Chicago Art Institute).
• 150th Birthday: In 2026, the artist will be honored with highly anticipated exhibitions, including “Becoming Paula” at the Museen Böttcherstraße in Bremen and “Paula Modersohn-Becker and Edvard Munch” at the Albertinum in Dresden.
PROVENANCE: Estate of the artist, Worpswede/Fischerhude.
Collection of Ernst Friedrich (Ernesto) Blohm, Caracas, Venezuela (acquired in 1961, Hauswedell, Hamburg).
In the family’s possession ever since.
LITERATURE: Günter Busch, Milena Schicketanz, Wolfgang Werner, Paula Modersohn-Becker 1876–1907. Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings, vol. II, Munich 1998, CR no. 392 (illustrated in black and white on p. 275).
- -
Dr. Ernst Hauswedell Buch- und Kunstantiquariat, Hamburg, 105th auction, Graphik, Handzeichnungen, Bilder, Plastik, June 5, 1961, lot 714 (illustrated on plate IV, dated “c. 1906”).
The human figure is at the heart of Paula Modersohn-Becker’s relatively small artistic legacy, cut short by her untimely death. Alongside her self-portraits, she is particularly well known for her prized portraits of children, to which she devoted herself beginning in 1898, after moving to the artists’ colony of Worpswede.
Before the creation of the present painting, the artist drew several preliminary sketches of a seated girl with a hat, holding a flower in her hand, which bear witness to Modersohn-Becker’s intensive compositional exploration of this motif (cf. Catalogue Raisonné of Hand Drawings, nos. E IV/130–E IV/133). In some respects, the girl resembles the artist’s stepdaughter, Elsbeth Modersohn (1898–1984)—who was about five years old at the time—Otto Modersohn’s daughter from his first marriage, who occasionally posed for the artist’s drawings and paintings. The artist also explores this motif in several paintings, including “Bust of a Girl with a Blue Hat and a Flower in Her Right Hand” (c. 1903, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, University of California) and the work offered here (see Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings, nos. 392–394). A little later, another painting with this motif was created, “Head of a Blonde Girl with a Straw Hat” (ca. 1904, Von der Heydt Museum, Wuppertal).
In the years around 1903–04, Modersohn-Becker typically applied the paint in thick layers, scraping the paint with the brush handle to create a relief-like surface that starkly contrasts with the children's faces. In keeping with the artist’s artistic principles and her pursuit of simplification, the head and body are no longer clearly defined; the facial features become de-individualized, schematized, blurred, and reduced to flat planes: “The great simplicity of form—that is something wonderful. I have always strived to imbue the heads I painted or drew with the simplicity of nature. [...] Forehead, eyes, mouth, nose, cheeks, chin—that's all. It sounds so simple, and yet it is so incredibly much.” (Journal entry, February 1903, quote from: Günter Busch and Liselotte von Reinken (eds.), Paula Modersohn-Becker in Briefen und Tagebüchern, Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 140)
In her depictions, Modersohn-Becker eschewed a genre-like, idealized, even Angelic portrayal of the children, instead developing a distinctive visual language that captures the essence of her subjects. With her characteristic rich palette, the artist created an image of intimacy and closeness, of stillness and distance, of darkness and soft light. Thus, “Paula Modersohn [...] took several significant strides ahead of the development of modern art in her short life, even before the founders of the new artistic language of Expressionism or Cubism were able to articulate themselves in a corresponding form.” (Günter Busch, Paula Modersohn-Becker. Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings, vol. I, Munich 1998, p. 3) [CH]
Before the creation of the present painting, the artist drew several preliminary sketches of a seated girl with a hat, holding a flower in her hand, which bear witness to Modersohn-Becker’s intensive compositional exploration of this motif (cf. Catalogue Raisonné of Hand Drawings, nos. E IV/130–E IV/133). In some respects, the girl resembles the artist’s stepdaughter, Elsbeth Modersohn (1898–1984)—who was about five years old at the time—Otto Modersohn’s daughter from his first marriage, who occasionally posed for the artist’s drawings and paintings. The artist also explores this motif in several paintings, including “Bust of a Girl with a Blue Hat and a Flower in Her Right Hand” (c. 1903, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, University of California) and the work offered here (see Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings, nos. 392–394). A little later, another painting with this motif was created, “Head of a Blonde Girl with a Straw Hat” (ca. 1904, Von der Heydt Museum, Wuppertal).
In the years around 1903–04, Modersohn-Becker typically applied the paint in thick layers, scraping the paint with the brush handle to create a relief-like surface that starkly contrasts with the children's faces. In keeping with the artist’s artistic principles and her pursuit of simplification, the head and body are no longer clearly defined; the facial features become de-individualized, schematized, blurred, and reduced to flat planes: “The great simplicity of form—that is something wonderful. I have always strived to imbue the heads I painted or drew with the simplicity of nature. [...] Forehead, eyes, mouth, nose, cheeks, chin—that's all. It sounds so simple, and yet it is so incredibly much.” (Journal entry, February 1903, quote from: Günter Busch and Liselotte von Reinken (eds.), Paula Modersohn-Becker in Briefen und Tagebüchern, Frankfurt am Main 2007, p. 140)
In her depictions, Modersohn-Becker eschewed a genre-like, idealized, even Angelic portrayal of the children, instead developing a distinctive visual language that captures the essence of her subjects. With her characteristic rich palette, the artist created an image of intimacy and closeness, of stillness and distance, of darkness and soft light. Thus, “Paula Modersohn [...] took several significant strides ahead of the development of modern art in her short life, even before the founders of the new artistic language of Expressionism or Cubism were able to articulate themselves in a corresponding form.” (Günter Busch, Paula Modersohn-Becker. Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings, vol. I, Munich 1998, p. 3) [CH]
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.



