HAMBURG.- With total proceeds of around 1.8 million, the two-day auction of Rare Books at
Ketterer Kunst in Hamburg on 21/22 November realized excellent results. Last year's figures were even exceeded by 200,000. Joachim Joh. Nepomuk Spalowsky's splendid natural history of mammals was particularly in demand.
The only edition of Joachim Joh. Nepomuk Spalowsky's Beytrag zur Naturgeschichte der vierfüssigen Thiere (lot 34) was the top lot in the auction. Several written bids and three phones from Germany, Austria and the USA competed for the lavishly printed natural history of mammals. Called up at 28,000 the bidding quickly picked up pace, eventually a collector from California made the race with a price of 72,000.
The list of written bids for Marc Chagall's Eaux-fortes originales (lot 113) was also quite long. The work with 105 original etchings was made in Paris in 1956. In preparation of this unique bible project, the artist visited Syria, Palestine and Egypt in order to get a feel for the oriental atmosphere. All the buyer from the US needed was a decisive bid, offering 61,200 he was able to relegate the mostly German bidders in the saleroom and a tough British competitor on the phone to places second and beyond.
Unlike expected, the beautiful work on North American Natives by Thomas McKenney and James Hall (lot 42) did not find a new home on the other side of the Atlantic Ocean. With a result of 26,400 an antiquarian book dealer from North Rhine-Westphalia showed the most bidding endurance.
Next to Friedrich Schiller's autographed manuscript fragment from Phaedra (lot 57), which went to a private German collector for a result of 25,800, the album amicorum by Georg Wilhelm Prahmer (lot 55) was also highly sought-after. In the case of the latter, a private collector from Hamburg succeeded and took the renowned album, which also carries an entry by Friedrich Schiller, home for a result of 22,800.
Max Ernst's Histoire naturelle (lot 105), one of the main works of Surrealism, went to a French dealer who had to pay 19,200, almost a five-fold of the starting price, in order to curb the competitors.
Bidding also perked up when two rare Programs (lot 90) of the Cabaret Fledermaus, founded by the Wiener Werkstätte in 1907, were called up at 4,000. One of the 15 original lithographs from, among others, Kokoschka, Löffler, Jung and Zeymar, adorns the catalog's cover. Lively bidding with the participation of various phones from Austria and England as well as several international written bids was eventually stopped by a Northern German antiquarian in the saleroom at a result of 17,400.
A similarly good result of 16.800 was realized for Jean de La Fontaine's Fables choisis, mises en vers (lot 60). A Southern German private collector granted a four-fold of the calling price of 4.000 and was the lucky winner of a tough race against competitors from Germany, France, Holland and Taiwan.
The same American who had earlier won the day's top lot also stood his grounds against book lovers from around the world when Jean-Etienne Guettard's Memoires sur différentes parties des sciences et arts (lot 26) where called up with 3,000. With a price of 13,200 he also provided around a four-fold of the calling price.