HAMBURG.- With total proceeds of around 1.4 million, the Rare Books Auction at
Ketter Kunst on 20 November grossed a very solid result. The evening sale alone provided an average increase of 80% per sold lot. An object that was particularly desired was Joachim Joh. Nepomuk Spalowskys very rare and splendid overview of the world of birds. It realized a five-fold of the calling price.
The competition for the extremely splendid edition of Joachim Joh. Nepomuk Spalowskys Beytrag zur Naturgeschichte der Vögel (lot 26) was strong. Apart from a number of written bids, several online bidders and participants in the saleroom, two phone bidders from France and Great Britain fueled the bidding race, making sure that the calling price of 15,000 was soon forgotten. Their bids remained on par for quite some time, however, eventually the French trader stood his grounds with the final and unbeatable bid of 74.000.
A little earlier the same amount had already been offered by an American trader for a Latin Book of Hours with the catalog number 12, outbidding, among others, colleagues from Switzerland and England, who fought hard for the lavishly made and richly illuminated parchment manuscript, but had to admit defeat.
One of the auctions main attractions was a very luxurious edition of an overview of Gustav Klimts work on 50 plates. Nine potential buyers from, among others, Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the USA, England and Kuwait had registered for this fine copy of the rare and tremendously elaborately printed Viennese portfolio (lot 54). Eventually, it took the bid of 66,420 from an Austrian institution to relegate international competitors to places second and beyond.
The list of written bids placed on Hartmann Schedels Weltchronik (lot 19) from 1493 was long. The first German edition of the then most accomplished book project, with more than 1800 woodcuts it is the most richly illustrated incunabula of all, was knocked down to, against expectation, an English trader on the phone. Despite strong interest in the books home country, he won the race with a result of 40,000 and outbid the written offers placed by his privately participating fellow countrymen.
Lot 456 made a different experience. Despite strong headwind, particularly from Great Britain, the Biblia germanica went to a German book lover. The private collector from North Rhine-Westphalia honored the only German bible edition from Koberger, at the same time one of the most significant German woodcut books from the early days of printing, with a result of 34,400.
The album amicorum of the mining student Jakob Christian Menzler with entries among others by Novalis (lot 42) was in likewise demand. Compiled between 1798 and 1811, the book with lines from the famous poet was particularly popular with domestic bidders. Accordingly, a German institution won the fascinating contemporary document for a price of 32,000.
The catalog raisonné Das graphische Werk Max Pechsteins (lot 73) by Paul Fechter was sold to a private collector from Bavaria, who had to offer a bid of around 22,000 in order to beat an English trader on another phone line, as well as tough competitors in the salesroom.