LONDON.- On 10 May 2011,
Sothebys European Photographs department will hold two Photographs sales: LEssentiel Heinz Hajek-Halke an auction which comprises the most compelling vintage prints from the 1920s to the 1950s of this German avant-garde photographer coming to auction directly from the artists estate, and Photographies a various owner sale offering an exceptional selection of works by the leading photographers of the 19th, 20th and 21st centuries.
Prior to the auction date the highlights from both sales are sent on a travelling exhibition to Sothebys New York and London in addition to the preview in Paris. The exhibition in London will be on show from 16 to 21 April and will focus on high quality material from the 19th century and early 20th century - the vintage era.
A prime example is the work of the pioneering Czech master Joseph Sudek. In our last sale in Paris in November 2011 we have achieved world record prices for two of his vintage pigment prints: Sans titre (Vase et rose morte), 1952 was estimated at 14,000 18,000 and realised 228,750, Sans titre (Etude de nature-morte), 1952 was estimated at 18,000 23,000 and realised 300,750.
On exhibition in London will be three fantastic pigment prints: Nature-morte à la poire, 1950-54 ( 8,000 12,000), Nature-morte à la branche de mûres, 1950s ( 10,000 15,000), Verre, du cycle Simple Still Lifes, 1950-1959 ( 14,000 18,000).
Man Ray, the great modernist who significantly contributed to the Dada and Surrealist movements and famously made the photogram his own under the name of Rayograph an image created by placing an object directly on a piece of photographic paper and exposing it to light to capture its impression will be represented in the exhibition with one of these ethereal creations Rayograph, 1924, estimated at 120,000 150,000, as well as vintage silver prints of a Mathematical Object, 1936 ( 30,000 50,000) and a Nude, c. 1933 ( 40,000 60,000).
A representative selection from the single owner sale The Essential Heinz Hajek-Halke will showcase the ingenuity of this remarkable figure of German avant-garde photography. Hajek-Halkes oeuvre holds a significant place in the history of photography. His artistic output from the inter-war period is characterised by photomontages and experimental works with an ironic, critical, sometimes political, even almost anarchic expression; many of his pictures reflect the modernity of life in a metropolis like Berlin. After WWII Hajek-Halke focused on abstract experimental studies which he called Lichtgrafiken. In 1949, he joined the avant-garde group fotoform founded in Saarbrücken by Otto Steinert, Peter Keetman and others. He died in Berlin in 1983.