HAMBURG.- With total proceeds of around 1.6 million, the auction of Rare Books at
Ketterer Kunst in Hamburg on 22 May 2017 achieved an outstanding result. The new concept with a focus on high-quality offers worked out. A lot total reduced by around 60% in comparison to last years May auction grossed a result on par with figures from the same period.
Several religious works were among the auctions main attractions, the array was led by the Biblia germanica (lot 11) made in Augsburg around 1474. It was sold to a collector from North Rhine-Westphalia in the saleroom who stood his grounds against mainly German competitors for a remarkable result of 144,000.
The Biblia germanica-latina (lot 13) made in Wittenberg around 1574, was also in heavy demand. A number of written bids and half a dozen phone bidders from Germany, Argentina and Switzerland made for a sharp increase of the calling price of 19,000. Despite strong international competition, a German dealer eventually won the lot with a bid worth 60,000.
While Jan Huygen van Linschotens Itinerario, the most acclaimed geographic work of its days with major impact on the Dutch expansion in Asia, was sold, as expected, to a Dutch private collector for a result of 72,000, Hartmann Schedels Liber chronicarum (lot 8) was sold to the west coast of the USA for 60,000 and a French dealer won the Chronica do felicissimo rei Dom Emanuel (lot 9) by Damião de Goes. Even though a German collector in the saleroom fought as hard as several phone bidders from Argentina and the USA, the Frenchman outbid them all with a result of 50,400.
The same result was also realized for Zao Wou-Kis Harry Roskolenko: Paris Poems (lot 94). The rare and complete copy of the de-luxe edition with a signed watercolor and the extra suite of lithographs went to an online bidder who left numerous phone bidders from all over Europe behind.
Both Adolph von Menzels Armeewerk Friedrichs des Großen, which climbed up to 36,000, as well as the auctions most sought-after book Le Surréalisme en 1947 (lot 89) by André Breton and Marcel Duchamp, with 24 original graphics and an object by Marcel Duchamp, remained in Germany. The latter was in great demand with the auction room, half a dozen written bids and a dozen phones from all over the world, making sure that this first edition of the important surrealist catalog soared from a calling price of 5,000 to a result of 34,800.