Duerckheim Collection
Duerckheim Collection
Duerckheim Collection
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Highlights in the Collection:
One of the major highlights of the auction will be Georg Baselitz’s oil
on canvas Die Grosse Nacht im Eimer (The Big Night Down the Drain),
executed in 1962-63., which is the most important German work of art
of the post war period to come to the market. It is the sister painting to
a work of the same title housed in the Museum Ludwig in Cologne
(Ludwig donation), and when that painting was unveiled in 1963 at the
artist's first solo exhibition and the inaugural show of Michael Werner
and Benjamin Katz's gallery in West Berlin, the Ludwig painting was
confiscated by the Director of Public Prosecutions on the grounds of
"infringement of public morality", and the artist and gallerists were
fined. It is widely recognised as the genesis of the artist's entire
illustrious canon, directly anticipating later series such as the 'Hero'
paintings, and related works are held in the world's most prestigious
collections, such as a 1963 watercolour of the same title that was included in the Royal Academy exhibition (cat no. 37)
and is now in MoMA (gift of R. L. B. Tobin, 1987). Executed when Baselitz was around 24 years old, Die Grosse Nacht
im Eimer (illustrated above) was inspired by a newspaper article about an Irish poet, Brendan Behan, who gave a
reading of his poetry drunk on stage with his trouser flies open. For the artist Die Grosse Nacht im Eimer represents the
ultimate provocation, which he of course considers the ultimate and inevitable purpose of his painting. At the press
conference for the Baselitz Remix exhibition at the Albertina in Vienna in 2007 the artist declared that "My first
painting, my first attempt at painting, was 'The Big Night Down the Drain'", and in the 2007 Royal Academy
retrospective catalogue Norman Rosenthal observed that "The artist recently stated in public that perhaps he never has
and never will make a finer painting than The Big Night Down the Drain.". The work is estimated at £2-3 million.
From this most important private archive of 1960s paintings by Georg Baselitz in existence, another principal highlight
is his oil on canvas Spekulatius (illustrated on page one), executed in 1965 and measuring 162.7 by 132cm, which is
emblematic of the artist’s celebrated ‘Hero’ series**. The painting, which is estimated at £1,800,000–2,500,000, stands
as one the most significant masterworks both of the series and of the revered artist’s entire illustrious career. It belongs
squarely at the centre of the seminal series of 'Hero Paintings' or ‘New Types’ that were executed between 1965 and
1966. As is exemplified in this painting, the vanquished, depleted protagonists in this cycle are survivors in a devastated
post-war Germany, whose tragic isolation invokes the specific heritage of German Romanticism from Goethe to
Caspar David Friedrich. Created by the artist in his mid-twenties and living in the German capital newly segregated by
the Berlin Wall, Spekulatius is directly comparable to examples of the cycle that are now housed in the Tate Gallery in
London and the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art in Humlebaek. Furthermore, the ‘Hero’ paintings have achieved
three of the top four prices for the artist at auction, including the record price of $4,633,000 at Sotheby’s New York on
14th May 2008.
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Another important work by Baselitz in the collection is his oil on canvas
Das Idol (illustrated right), measuring 100.3 by 81.7cm, which carries an
estimate of £600,000–800,000. Executed in the year following the
erection of the Berlin Wall and the remarkable creation of a 26 year old,
Das Idol of 1964 confronts the viewer as a searing existential vision of
imagery that is without precedent.
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A further highlight by Polke is his oil and dispersion on canvas
Stadtbild II (illustrated right), signed and dated 68 on the reverse, 151
by 125.5cm, which is estimated at £2,000,000–3,000,000. The work
showing the New York skyline is a brilliant crescendo of Polke’s late-
1960s output, revealing fascinating parallels and developments in his
use of media and treatment of subject matter.
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Further works by Richter in the collection comprise the artist’s
provocative oil on canvas Schwestern (illustrated on previous page), dated
1967, measuring 65.3 by 65cm., which is an exemplary model of his
appropriation of found imagery (est. £1,200,000–1,800,000); and his oil
on canvas 1024 Farben (illustrated left), dated 1974, numbered 356/3,
measuring 96.3 by 96.2cm (est. £1,000,000–1,500,000). Finally the sale
will offer the second work recorded in Richter’s legendary catalogue
raisonné, his oil on canvas Eisläuferin, which was previously believed to be
destroyed (est. £2,000,000–3,000,000).
A. R. Penck (b1939)
Systembild
signed with the artist's Initial
oil on canvas, 129.5 by 99cm.
Estimate: £150,000 – 200,000
Notes to Editor:
Editor:
*Estimates do not include buyer’s premium
**Georg Baselitz: six paintings on this subject that have achieved six successive record auction results for the artist during a period
of over twenty years.
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