Auction "Online Sale", ends in: 8 day(s) Lot 123000913
123000913
Emil Nolde
Kirche und Schiff, Sonderburg, 1907.
Lithograph in colors
Starting bid: € 10,800 / $ 11,880
Kirche und Schiff, Sonderburg. 1907/1915.
Lithograph in colors.
Signed, numbered “Aufl. Nr. 31” and titled “Kirche und Schiff”, presumably by Ada Nolde. Copy 31 from an edition of 37 copies in color. On firm wove paper. 49 x 32.5 cm (19.2 x 12.7 in). Sheet: 59,7 x 43 cm (23,5 x 17 in).
Printed by Westphalen, Flensburg 1915. [AR]
The "Brücke": Expressionism on Paper – The Passion of a German Collector
Further works from the collection will be offered in our Evening Sale on Friday, December 6, 2024, and in our Modern Art Day Sale, December 7, 2024.
• A vibrant, high-contrast lithograph.
• Nolde stages the interplay of light effects against the backdrop of the black harbor of Sonderburg in Denmark
• Family-owned for more than 40 years.
PROVENANCE: Private collection, Hesse (since 1983: Hauswedell & Nolte, exhibition).
In family ownership.
LITERATURE: Gustav Schiefler, Christel Mosel, Martin Urban, Emil Nolde – Das graphische Werk, vol. II: Holzschnitte, Lithographien, Hektographien, Cologne 1996, catalogue raisonné no. L 21 II (of II) (illustrated)
- -
Dr. Ernst Hauswedell, Hamburg, 138th auction, May 29, 1965, lot 768 (illustrated on p. 98).
Roman Norbert Ketterer, Moderne Kunst III. Gemälde, Aquarelle, Zeichnungen, Campione d'Italia 1966, cat. no. 161 (illustrated in color on p. 178).
Galerie Wolfgang Ketterer, inventory catalog 51, Munich 1968/69, cat. no. 1891 (illustrated on p. 206).
Galerie Kornfeld, Bern, 169th auction, Modern Art, June 22, 1979, lot 939 (illustrated on plate 119).
The "Brücke": Expressionism on Paper – The Passion of a German Collector
The Hessian collector recollects his first encounter with Expressionist art to this day: it was shortly after the end of World War II that he was struck by Karl Schmidt-Rottluff paintings on a visit to the Frankfurter Kunstkabinett. The gallery was one of the first in Germany to offer art lovers an opportunity to see works by the artists of the "Brücke" group again, as they had been ostracized as "degenerate" by the Nazis. One of the main reasons behind Hanna Bekker von Rath's decision to open the place on Börsenplatz in Frankfurt in 1947 was to provide a forum for these artists after the dark years of Nazi rule and to reintroduce them to the public. “These works blew me away” is how the collector recalls his initial reaction to the exhibits. He liked Schmidt-Rottluff's rugged, woodcut-like style and subsequently also developed a liking for the other members of the “Brücke”, whose style was so different from what had previously been considered “beautiful”. Together with his wife – who was particularly interested in the works of Otto Mueller and Emil Nolde – he visited many more exhibitions at the Frankfurt Kunstkabinett and other galleries.
Nevertheless, it was about more than just admiring them. In 1962, the couple bought their first Expressionist work at auction in Stuttgart – from Roman Norbert Ketterer, the uncle of the current owner of Ketterer Kunst: Ernst Ludwig Kirchner's woodcut "Drei Akte im Wald" from 1933 marked the beginning of the couple's extensive collection of "Brücke" prints.
He never had a specific system, says the collector. However, he avoided acquiring pieces that “many others had as well”. He was particularly interested in works produced in small numbers, pieces with a unique feature such as an additional coat of paint, or works that the artist used as trial proofs. But first and foremost, says the collector, “I made my purchases based on my taste”.
In good condition. Slightly discolored and with isolated brown spots. Small creases and production marks in the margins, a very small tear in the upper right. Minor remains of an old mounting on the left edge of the sheet.
Lithograph in colors.
Signed, numbered “Aufl. Nr. 31” and titled “Kirche und Schiff”, presumably by Ada Nolde. Copy 31 from an edition of 37 copies in color. On firm wove paper. 49 x 32.5 cm (19.2 x 12.7 in). Sheet: 59,7 x 43 cm (23,5 x 17 in).
Printed by Westphalen, Flensburg 1915. [AR]
The "Brücke": Expressionism on Paper – The Passion of a German Collector
Further works from the collection will be offered in our Evening Sale on Friday, December 6, 2024, and in our Modern Art Day Sale, December 7, 2024.
• A vibrant, high-contrast lithograph.
• Nolde stages the interplay of light effects against the backdrop of the black harbor of Sonderburg in Denmark
• Family-owned for more than 40 years.
PROVENANCE: Private collection, Hesse (since 1983: Hauswedell & Nolte, exhibition).
In family ownership.
LITERATURE: Gustav Schiefler, Christel Mosel, Martin Urban, Emil Nolde – Das graphische Werk, vol. II: Holzschnitte, Lithographien, Hektographien, Cologne 1996, catalogue raisonné no. L 21 II (of II) (illustrated)
- -
Dr. Ernst Hauswedell, Hamburg, 138th auction, May 29, 1965, lot 768 (illustrated on p. 98).
Roman Norbert Ketterer, Moderne Kunst III. Gemälde, Aquarelle, Zeichnungen, Campione d'Italia 1966, cat. no. 161 (illustrated in color on p. 178).
Galerie Wolfgang Ketterer, inventory catalog 51, Munich 1968/69, cat. no. 1891 (illustrated on p. 206).
Galerie Kornfeld, Bern, 169th auction, Modern Art, June 22, 1979, lot 939 (illustrated on plate 119).
The "Brücke": Expressionism on Paper – The Passion of a German Collector
The Hessian collector recollects his first encounter with Expressionist art to this day: it was shortly after the end of World War II that he was struck by Karl Schmidt-Rottluff paintings on a visit to the Frankfurter Kunstkabinett. The gallery was one of the first in Germany to offer art lovers an opportunity to see works by the artists of the "Brücke" group again, as they had been ostracized as "degenerate" by the Nazis. One of the main reasons behind Hanna Bekker von Rath's decision to open the place on Börsenplatz in Frankfurt in 1947 was to provide a forum for these artists after the dark years of Nazi rule and to reintroduce them to the public. “These works blew me away” is how the collector recalls his initial reaction to the exhibits. He liked Schmidt-Rottluff's rugged, woodcut-like style and subsequently also developed a liking for the other members of the “Brücke”, whose style was so different from what had previously been considered “beautiful”. Together with his wife – who was particularly interested in the works of Otto Mueller and Emil Nolde – he visited many more exhibitions at the Frankfurt Kunstkabinett and other galleries.
Nevertheless, it was about more than just admiring them. In 1962, the couple bought their first Expressionist work at auction in Stuttgart – from Roman Norbert Ketterer, the uncle of the current owner of Ketterer Kunst: Ernst Ludwig Kirchner's woodcut "Drei Akte im Wald" from 1933 marked the beginning of the couple's extensive collection of "Brücke" prints.
He never had a specific system, says the collector. However, he avoided acquiring pieces that “many others had as well”. He was particularly interested in works produced in small numbers, pieces with a unique feature such as an additional coat of paint, or works that the artist used as trial proofs. But first and foremost, says the collector, “I made my purchases based on my taste”.
In good condition. Slightly discolored and with isolated brown spots. Small creases and production marks in the margins, a very small tear in the upper right. Minor remains of an old mounting on the left edge of the sheet.
123000913
Emil Nolde
Kirche und Schiff, Sonderburg, 1907.
Lithograph in colors
Starting bid: € 10,800 / $ 11,880