Digital Editions
Newsletters
Subscribe
Digital Editions
Newsletters
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Art market
Museums & heritage
Exhibitions
Books
Podcasts
Columns
Technology
Adventures with Van Gogh
Auctions
news

The best of Germany's June auctions

Auction houses in Berlin, Cologne and Munich offer a restituted Menzel, Brücke artists and a Richter

Catherine Hickley
1 June 2016
Share

Berlin

Berlin’s Villa Grisebach will today (1 June) auction valuable works restituted from German and Swiss museums to the heirs of Rudolf Mosse, a newspaper magnate persecuted by the Nazis and forced to sell his collection in 1934. Works in the sale of 19th-century art include a pastel portrait by Berlin’s best-known artist of his time, Adolph Menzel, showing the artist’s sister in a red blouse (around 1850). The pastel, with a high estimate of €400,000, will be offered alongside Wilhelm Leibl’s Portrait of the Appellate Judge Stenglein (1871), and Ludwig von Hofmann’s Spring Storm (around 1894-95), a key Jugendstil work. The Mosse Foundation, set up in 2012, is seeking hundreds more works sold under duress at two auctions in Berlin 82 years ago.

Top lots in Villa Grisebach’s Selected Works sale on June 2 include a 1926 oil painting of clouds scudding across a blue sky by Emil Nolde with a high estimate of €1.6m.

Cologne

A vivid yellow-and-red abstract by Gerhard Richter (17.4.89., 1989) and a Sigmar Polke (untitled, 1986) from a private Rhineland collection, both with high estimates of €200,000, are among the highlights in Van Ham’s contemporary art exhibition on 1 and 2 June. The Brücke artist Otto Müller’s distemper work Gypsy Huts from 1928 heads the Modern art offerings, and is expected to fetch as much as €300,000. Van Ham is also offering works by the Zero artist Otto Piene, a John Chamberlain steel sculpture and a Max Liebermann drawing of two girls.

Top lots at nearby Kunsthaus Lempertz on 3 June include a 1916 self-portrait by Giovanni Giacometti showing the artist in front of a stream of light from the window and a vase of red tulips. The estimated price is €290,000.

Munich

A 1928 geometrical composition by Wassily Kandinsky, Kleines Warm, gets the top billing at Ketterer Kunst’s Modern sale on 11 June. The watercolour, with a high estimate of €600,000, will be on offer alongside works by Emil Nolde, Otto Müller and a stormy painting of the Baltic Coast by their fellow Brücke artist Max Pechstein. Ketterer’s Modern sale also includes a collection of 47 works that once adorned the offices of a German company whose identity the auction house declined to disclose, and which have never before been offered at auction. These include works on paper by the Brücke artists Marc Chagall, Georges Braque and Otto Dix and oil paintings by Otto Modersohn. Contemporary highlights at Ketterer include a blue monochrome by Yves Klein and sculptures by Anselm Kiefer and Tony Cragg.

AuctionsArt market
Share
Subscribe to The Art Newspaper’s digital newsletter for your daily digest of essential news, views and analysis from the international art world delivered directly to your inbox.
Newsletter sign-up
Information
About
Contact
Cookie policy
Data protection
Privacy policy
Frequently Asked Questions
Subscription T&Cs
Terms and conditions
Advertise
Sister Papers
Sponsorship policy
Follow us
Instagram
Bluesky
LinkedIn
Facebook
TikTok
YouTube
© The Art Newspaper

Related content

Art marketnews
24 October 2018

Villa Grisebach to sell founder’s collection to raise funds for new Museum of Exile

Two-day auction will include works by Picasso, Matisse, Egon Schiele, collected by Bernd Schultz over six decades

Catherine Hickley
Art marketnews
13 September 2018

Sotheby’s to offer landmark paintings by Marsden Hartley and Ludwig Meidner in November

The auction house hopes the works will surpass previous records by several million

Gabriella Angeleti
Art marketnews
3 November 2023

Christie’s to auction Pechstein painting after settlement reached with heir

Hilda Graetz sold 'Still Life With a Cup' to fund her new life in South Africa after her art dealer father died in a concentration camp

Catherine Hickley
Object lessonsnews
25 February 2019

Object lessons: from Egon Schiele's nod to Gustav Klimt to black magic by René Magritte

Our highlights from upcoming fairs and auctions

Anna Brady, Kabir Jhala and Margaret Carrigan