As of May 15, 2024

Lotte Laserstein

Lot 467
Porträt Katharina und Anne-Marie Riedl, 1932
Oil on panel

25.6 x 19.7 in (65.0 x 50.0 cm)

Lot 467
Porträt Katharina und Anne-Marie Riedl, 1932
Oil on panel
25.6 x 19.7 in (65.0 x 50.0 cm)

Estimate:
€ 40,000 - 60,000
Auction: 10 days

Ketterer Kunst GmbH & Co KG

City: Munich
Auction: Jun 08, 2024
Auction number: 554
Auction name: Modern Art Day Sale

Lot Details
Oil on panel. Signed in the upper right. 65 x 50 cm.
- Lotte Laserstein is considered one of the most important German painters of the 20th century. - A striking double portrait with an extraordinary presence that is characteristic of the artist's work. - From today's perspective, the paintings created in Berlin between 1927 and 1933 represent the pinnacle of her oeuvre. - A major solo exhibition is on display at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm until April 2024 and her works are also shown at the Leopold Museum in Vienna until September 2024.
Family-owned since the work was made
As one of the first women to study art at the Berlin Academy, Lotte Laserstein was celebrated in Berlin during the Weimar Republic as a "shining talent" and "great artist". (Unterhaltungsblatt der Düsseldorfer Nachrichten, January 14, 1930; Der Berliner Westen, December 12, 1930) But as early as in 1933, after the National Socialists had came into power and her subsequent emigration to Sweden, she began to fall into oblivion. Until the 1990s, she was hardly mentioned either in public or in academic discourse, in contrast to many of her male contemporaries. Like Käthe Kollwitz, Laserstein developed her very own pictorial formula, which is impossible to subsume under a generic term such as New Objectivity. The impressive realist can therefore be regarded as one of the most important German painters of the 20th century, not least because of her thematic focus on the "role of the new woman". In our double portrait, the subject seems to be the role of the 'new girl'. Laserstein places the sisters very prominently in the pictorial space. This presence is reinforced by the insistent, clear gaze of the older girl. It seems as if she was aiming her gaze at the viewer, at the same time she sensitively observes her surroundings. The girls hold the ball together in an intimate bond, a rather unusual attribute for girls of the time, as ball games and sporting activities were more a male domain. Laserstein skillfully placed the girls' hands around the ball - eyes and hands are thoughtfully staged. The Jewish artist was at the height of her creative output in the early 1930s, as this double portrait impressively demonstrates. In line with Laserstein's ideas, the future belonged to these two determined and fearless girls. The portrait of the sisters should be seen as an image, an idea of their potential. Following her example, they should be part of a new generation of self-confident women who take their lives into their own hands. [AW/NK]
In fine condition. Slightly rubbed in places, reinforced in the outer margins, here partly due to the framing, and reinforced in the upper right margin. Tiny pinholes in the outer corners of the image from the making. Minimal isolated cracks in the wood, somewhat more pronounced in two areas, as well as with tiny soiled spots in places. The condition report was compiled in daylight with the help of an ultraviolet light and to the best of knowledge.
Lot Details
Oil on panel. Signed in the upper right. 65 x 50 cm.
- Lotte Laserstein is considered one of the most important German painters of the 20th century. - A striking double portrait with an extraordinary presence that is characteristic of the artist's work. - From today's perspective, the paintings created in Berlin between 1927 and 1933 represent the pinnacle of her oeuvre. - A major solo exhibition is on display at the Moderna Museet in Stockholm until April 2024 and her works are also shown at the Leopold Museum in Vienna until September 2024.
Family-owned since the work was made
As one of the first women to study art at the Berlin Academy, Lotte Laserstein was celebrated in Berlin during the Weimar Republic as a "shining talent" and "great artist". (Unterhaltungsblatt der Düsseldorfer Nachrichten, January 14, 1930; Der Berliner Westen, December 12, 1930) But as early as in 1933, after the National Socialists had came into power and her subsequent emigration to Sweden, she began to fall into oblivion. Until the 1990s, she was hardly mentioned either in public or in academic discourse, in contrast to many of her male contemporaries. Like Käthe Kollwitz, Laserstein developed her very own pictorial formula, which is impossible to subsume under a generic term such as New Objectivity. The impressive realist can therefore be regarded as one of the most important German painters of the 20th century, not least because of her thematic focus on the "role of the new woman". In our double portrait, the subject seems to be the role of the 'new girl'. Laserstein places the sisters very prominently in the pictorial space. This presence is reinforced by the insistent, clear gaze of the older girl. It seems as if she was aiming her gaze at the viewer, at the same time she sensitively observes her surroundings. The girls hold the ball together in an intimate bond, a rather unusual attribute for girls of the time, as ball games and sporting activities were more a male domain. Laserstein skillfully placed the girls' hands around the ball - eyes and hands are thoughtfully staged. The Jewish artist was at the height of her creative output in the early 1930s, as this double portrait impressively demonstrates. In line with Laserstein's ideas, the future belonged to these two determined and fearless girls. The portrait of the sisters should be seen as an image, an idea of their potential. Following her example, they should be part of a new generation of self-confident women who take their lives into their own hands. [AW/NK]
In fine condition. Slightly rubbed in places, reinforced in the outer margins, here partly due to the framing, and reinforced in the upper right margin. Tiny pinholes in the outer corners of the image from the making. Minimal isolated cracks in the wood, somewhat more pronounced in two areas, as well as with tiny soiled spots in places. The condition report was compiled in daylight with the help of an ultraviolet light and to the best of knowledge.

Lotte Laserstein Artist presented in curated searches
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