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Self-portrait by Pechstein auctioned for over 3 million

The painting "Self-Portrait, Reclining" by Max Pechstein has been auctioned for 3.2 million euros following confusion over its provenance. All bidders at the auction on Friday evening came from Germany and Switzerland, according to the Lempertz auction house. According to the auction house, the...

The Lempertz auction house in Cologne, taken on 06.09.2016. Photo.aussiedlerbote.de
The Lempertz auction house in Cologne, taken on 06.09.2016. Photo.aussiedlerbote.de

Lempertz Auction House - Self-portrait by Pechstein auctioned for over 3 million

The painting"Self-Portrait, Reclining" by Max Pechstein has been auctioned for 3.2 million euros following confusion over its provenance. All bidders at the auction on Friday evening came from Germany and Switzerland, according to the Lempertz auction house. According to the auction house, the work by Pechstein (1881-1955) is the painter's most important self-portrait and will now go to a German private collection. The estimated price for the colorful oil painting, created in 1909, was 1.5 million to 2 million euros, according to the catalog.

The expressionist work was originally part of the collection of the Jewish doctor Walter Blank (1892-1938) in Cologne, who sold it in 1936. In the same year, he emigrated to Antwerp with his two sons.

The painting was to be auctioned at Kunsthaus Lempertz on June 6 of this year. According to the auction house, the provenance had been extensively researched beforehand and it had been ruled out that it was looted art.

On the day of the auction, one of the Blank family's heirs had the work entered into the "Lost Art" database. This documents cultural assets that were confiscated from those persecuted by the Nazi dictatorship between 1933 and 1945 or for which such a loss cannot be ruled out.

Registered bidders, including a museum, were unsettled by the "Lost Art" entry. The painting was withdrawn from the summer auction. However, the legal examination of the work and its provenance has shown that it is not looted art, according to Lempertz. The work was therefore now one of the main works in the fall auction. It is no longer among the more than 160 Pechstein works in the "Lost Art" database.

Information on the discussion about the work Information from the Pechstein-Werke auction catalog at "Lost Art"

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The Self-Portrait by Max Pechstein was originally owned by Jewish doctor Walter Blank in Cologne, Germany. Despite being entered into the "Lost Art" database by a Blank family heir, the painting was found to not be looted art and was subsequently auctioned at Kunsthaus Lempertz in North Rhine-Westphalia. The expressionist Self-Portrait, created in 1909, fetched over 3 million euros at the fall auction, securing a place in a German private collection. Despite controversy, the renowned auction house Lempertz Auction House in Cologne played a significant role in the auction of Pechstein's Self-Portrait.

Source: www.stern.de

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