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Total de Resultados: 25

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412-38591 Couple walking, commuting with bicycle on urban street
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412-35468 Smiling young couple friends hanging out in cafe
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412-35454 Smiling young couple friends taking selfie with selfie stick on autumn street
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412-35452 Playful young friends taking selfie with selfie stick on urban autumn bridge, Amsterdam
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412-35443 Friends with bicycles greeting and hugging on sunny autumn street
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412-35441 Portrait playful friends with arms raised on sunny autumn bridge over canal, Amsterdam
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412-35438 Smiling friends toasting beer glasses at autumn sidewalk cafe
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412-35436 Smiling friends drinking beer and taking selfie with digital tablet at autumn sidewalk cafe
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412-35433 Friends laughing and eating cheesecake dessert at autumn sidewalk cafe along canal, Amsterdam
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412-35427 Smiling friends taking selfie with selfie stick at autumn sidewalk cafe
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412-35405 Friends eating dessert and drinking coffee at autumn sidewalk cafe along canal
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412-35399 Friends laughing, hanging out on autumn bench
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412-35379 Friends hanging out drinking hot chocolate in cafe
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412-35373 Smiling young friends bike riding on urban autumn street
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412-35348 Friends drinking beer at outdoor autumn cafe
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412-35341 Portrait smiling friends hanging out in cafe
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412-35339 Portrait smiling friends hugging at sunny autumn canal
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412-35991 Runners talking and stretching on sunny urban sidewalk
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412-35903 Runners stretching and talking at sunny urban waterfront
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NN11559809 CHINA. Shenzhen. 2014. Close to 8pm, night shift workers arrive by bus at the gargantuan "Foxconn City" in Longhua district in north Shenzhen. A sense of detachment and alienation is palpable among some, perhaps newer to the area or more introverted. By the same token there are many couples walking around hand in hand or groups of friends eating and playing together. “Foxconn City” is a 850-acre (344-hectare) campus of factories, dormitories, grocery stores, banks, and cafes, with its own radio and television stations and fire brigade— where over 200,000 factory workers build electronics like iPhones, iPads, Kindles, Microsoft Xbox consoles and other devices, It's been in the news in recent years for the number of workers who have commited suicide while working there. Now, there are barricades high on the five-storey factory buildings' rooftops and netting beneath its lower floors. Like migrant workers everywhere else, hundreds of thousands of mostly young Chinese from all over the country -- mostly from rural places -- come here to work and to try to make money for a better life.
DC
PAR419517 IRAQ. Baghdad. May 3, 2008.The offensive launched by the Iraqi government militias on Sadr City had an unexpected effect. Too busy to resist by force of arms, the Shiite fundamentalist militants have released their grip on morals.The Baghdadis exhausted by five years of war want to live. Ending the civil war and militia. While the fights ravage Sadr City, 15 kilometers away, residents of the capital are having small pleasures. The Baghdadis have tea again on CafŽ terraces, and the wedding ceremonies are back in Babylone Hotel. All these little things were inconceivable only a few months ago.This apparent sweetness of life found, does not hide the harsh reality: attacks, kidnappings and assassinations are still part of daily life, and Iraqis are more than ever sick of the occupation of their country by U.S. troops and their allies. A couple of months ago, at 5 pm, all Baghdadis were at home, scared. Now, they dare getting together outside, with friends until the middle of the night.
DC
akg8555271 KALLMORGEN, FRIEDRICH1856 Altona - 1924 GrötzingenSiechenhäuser in Lübeck. Oil on canvas. 162 x 229cm. Notation: Signed and dated lower left: Fr. Kallmorgen 1908. Frame/Pedestal: Framed. Literature: Exhib. cat.: Friedrich Kallmorgen 1865-1924. Malerei zwischen Realismus und Impressionismus, Städtische Galerie Karlsruhe 19.03. - 26.06.2016, Petersberg 2016, ill. p. 134;Eder, Irene: Friedrich Kallmorgen 1856-1924. Monographie und Werkverzeichnis der Gemälde und Druckgraphik, Karlsruhe 1991, cat. rais. no. G 618. Provenance:Kaletta collection, Hamburg.Collecting in itself has probably always been a characteristic of man.Among contemporaries there are those who are more addicted to this ""drive"" than others, once the subject of the collection, the focusing interest, has been found. From the universal compilation of a ""Kunst- und Wunderkammer"" to an absolutely limited specialisation in a narrowly defined field, the creative spirit of the collector creates a superior work of art in the selection itself.Rolf Kaletta from Hamburg was such a collector's specialist. Even before his sudden death in September 2020, he also managed to let go and hand over his works, which he had meticulously brought together in a phase of his life - this was certainly not an easy step, as each object has a personal history of finds. We are all the more pleased that he has repeatedly placed his trust in us over the past years to sell his musecollection of works by the painter Friedrich Kallmorgen, which has been assembled over several decades, in our house.When Rolf Kaletta ""discovered"" his first painting by Friedrich Kallmorgen in the 1970s, he had no idea how much space this painter and his work would make room in his own life. Rolf Kaletta, who was born in Altona, liked a view of Hamburg by Kallmorgen, who lived in the Hanseatic city, so much that he raved about it; a generous family and a generous circle of friends surprised the jubilant at an upcoming round birthday with a gift that was to have consequences. Living together with this wonderful work aroused Rolf Kaletta's curiosity and spirit of research. He wanted to know more about the creator of this work and met people in the Hamburg art trade and in the Städtische Galerie Karlsruhe, who opened the doors for him and arranged the decisive contact to Kallmorgen's grandson, Hans Knab. In the meantime some paintings from the art trade had already joined the first view of Hamburg, but now Rolf Kaletta was with Hans Knab, who was at first somewhat reserved, at the most immediate source to research Friedrich Kallmorgen and to expand the collection he had begun.Giesela Nehring-Knab, the wife of Hans Knab, initially mediated between the so different personalities of the Hanseatic collector and the older, Baden artist grandson, but soon the spell was broken and a lifelong, close friendship between the two Kallmorgen enthusiasts developed. Regular encounters lasting several days with innumerable conversations and access to Hans Knab's private archive made Rolf Kaletta an expert, who trained his view of the painter's work ever more finely, but who was also able to distance himself from his ""mentor"" Hans Knab in terms of taste. If the grandson loved his grandfather's finer and more precisely executed, more graphic paintings, Rolf Kaletta's heart beat especially for the freer, impressionistic and impasto works, but without limiting himself to these in his collection.Among the paintings masterfully executed with a light brush in our current auction are ""Brand im Dorf"" from 1901 (lot 1211), ""Vesper in der Werkstatt"" from 1907 (lot 1210), ""Lieselotte nascht Johannisbeeren"" from 1911 (lot 1217) or ""Sonnenuntergang"" from 1919 (lot 1214). The dates show that Kallmorgen cultivated this relaxed, impressionistic style throughout, parallel to the more austere, emblematic one. Occasionally, such free works are also studies for larger, sometimes more austere versions of the same motif. But the studies are also fully signed and exist on an equal footing within the oeuvre.The ""Brand im Dorf"" (Lot 1211) shows the painter as a village chronicler: In 1901 the community barn in Grötzing, the village near Karlsruhe, where the Kallmorgen couple had owned a ""refuge"" for decades, was destroyed in a night-time fire. Under the immediate impression of this event Kallmorgen created the present work. The flickering blaze of the flames, the dramatic struggle of the firemen illuminated by the glow of the fire, the nocturnal inferno, so charming for the painter and so rich in contrast, was captured by Kallmorgen with rapid, impressionistic brushstrokes.Lot 1208, ""Siechenhäuser in Lübeck"", also appears to have been painted by the hand of an exact chronicler, with a very expressive composition: Seen close up, a house wall with a door and two windows running diagonally into the image space blocks the view. The detail of the image is chosen low, so that the door and window are cut off at the upper edge of the image. Five old people, staggered one behind the other, sit on chairs, stools or steps and look ahead. Four of them look towards the right edge of the image. Only the middle old woman in the middle looks out of the image at the viewer. The space in the image, so narrowed by the angle of view, the passive posture and the empty facial expressions of the five old people, but also the smallest details, such as a slightly protruding tongue of one woman or the thinning hair of another, make this large-format work so impressive. As narrow the pictorial space is, as limited are the possibilities of the short remaining life, when material possibilities do not open up spaces.There are magnificent images of the creation of this painting, which show Friedrich Kallmorgen and his students at work in front of their easels. In fact, the photos and also Kallmorgen's own sketches for this painting were not taken in Lübeck, but during an excursion with his students to Havelberg near Berlin in 1905.Friedrich Kallmorgen travelled a lot and was always looking for impressions, landscapes and motives, which he then - as it was usual in his time - composed into large works in his studio. On the spot, in nature, he made studies, created a repertoire of staff and landscapes and sometimes he collaged several of such elements to a narrative whole of a painting.A wonderful proof of this working method is the painting ""Feierstunde"" from 1913 (lot 1215). Already in 1911 Kallmorgen had worked out the motif of the deserted ""Plauer Schleuse"" with its atmospheric water reflections into a smaller painting. From the same year dates another small work ""Heimkehrende Fischer"". Two years later the painter ""weaved"" these two images and created the present large-format painting. The four fishermen standing in the boat as they glide through the mirror-smooth water towards the people waiting at the lock actually radiate an atmosphere which, in combination with the mighty, colourful trees in the background and the charming reflection in the water, is exaggerated to a solemnity.Friedrich Kallmorgen's favourite travel destinations were in Holland, and it was there that he created the earliest painting offered here, ""The Narrator"" from 1892 (lot 1209), which stylistically also belongs to the more austere, more graphic works. On a street at a Dutch harbour a group of young women and children listen to a man sitting on the ground. Another man smoking a pipe is leaning against the fence next to the narrator. The background with buildings and the hustle and bustle of the harbour, although elaborated in detail, becomes quite secondary. The small group of people, which is so closely knit and so concentrated on each other, captivates the viewer.The variety of Kallmorgen's thirteen works on offer here from the various style and motif groups shows impressively the high quality standards with which Rolf Kaletta has built up his collection. Starting with a first image of Hamburg, he has, with the help of Hans Knab, developed a holistic approach to the artist Friedrich Kallmorgen..
DC
akg8555272 KALLMORGEN, FRIEDRICH1856 Altona - 1924 GrötzingenSiechenhäuser in Lübeck. Oil on canvas. 162 x 229cm. Notation: Signed and dated lower left: Fr. Kallmorgen 1908. Frame/Pedestal: Framed. Literature: Exhib. cat.: Friedrich Kallmorgen 1865-1924. Malerei zwischen Realismus und Impressionismus, Städtische Galerie Karlsruhe 19.03. - 26.06.2016, Petersberg 2016, ill. p. 134;Eder, Irene: Friedrich Kallmorgen 1856-1924. Monographie und Werkverzeichnis der Gemälde und Druckgraphik, Karlsruhe 1991, cat. rais. no. G 618. Provenance:Kaletta collection, Hamburg.Collecting in itself has probably always been a characteristic of man.Among contemporaries there are those who are more addicted to this ""drive"" than others, once the subject of the collection, the focusing interest, has been found. From the universal compilation of a ""Kunst- und Wunderkammer"" to an absolutely limited specialisation in a narrowly defined field, the creative spirit of the collector creates a superior work of art in the selection itself.Rolf Kaletta from Hamburg was such a collector's specialist. Even before his sudden death in September 2020, he also managed to let go and hand over his works, which he had meticulously brought together in a phase of his life - this was certainly not an easy step, as each object has a personal history of finds. We are all the more pleased that he has repeatedly placed his trust in us over the past years to sell his musecollection of works by the painter Friedrich Kallmorgen, which has been assembled over several decades, in our house.When Rolf Kaletta ""discovered"" his first painting by Friedrich Kallmorgen in the 1970s, he had no idea how much space this painter and his work would make room in his own life. Rolf Kaletta, who was born in Altona, liked a view of Hamburg by Kallmorgen, who lived in the Hanseatic city, so much that he raved about it; a generous family and a generous circle of friends surprised the jubilant at an upcoming round birthday with a gift that was to have consequences. Living together with this wonderful work aroused Rolf Kaletta's curiosity and spirit of research. He wanted to know more about the creator of this work and met people in the Hamburg art trade and in the Städtische Galerie Karlsruhe, who opened the doors for him and arranged the decisive contact to Kallmorgen's grandson, Hans Knab. In the meantime some paintings from the art trade had already joined the first view of Hamburg, but now Rolf Kaletta was with Hans Knab, who was at first somewhat reserved, at the most immediate source to research Friedrich Kallmorgen and to expand the collection he had begun.Giesela Nehring-Knab, the wife of Hans Knab, initially mediated between the so different personalities of the Hanseatic collector and the older, Baden artist grandson, but soon the spell was broken and a lifelong, close friendship between the two Kallmorgen enthusiasts developed. Regular encounters lasting several days with innumerable conversations and access to Hans Knab's private archive made Rolf Kaletta an expert, who trained his view of the painter's work ever more finely, but who was also able to distance himself from his ""mentor"" Hans Knab in terms of taste. If the grandson loved his grandfather's finer and more precisely executed, more graphic paintings, Rolf Kaletta's heart beat especially for the freer, impressionistic and impasto works, but without limiting himself to these in his collection.Among the paintings masterfully executed with a light brush in our current auction are ""Brand im Dorf"" from 1901 (lot 1211), ""Vesper in der Werkstatt"" from 1907 (lot 1210), ""Lieselotte nascht Johannisbeeren"" from 1911 (lot 1217) or ""Sonnenuntergang"" from 1919 (lot 1214). The dates show that Kallmorgen cultivated this relaxed, impressionistic style throughout, parallel to the more austere, emblematic one. Occasionally, such free works are also studies for larger, sometimes more austere versions of the same motif. But the studies are also fully signed and exist on an equal footing within the oeuvre.The ""Brand im Dorf"" (Lot 1211) shows the painter as a village chronicler: In 1901 the community barn in Grötzing, the village near Karlsruhe, where the Kallmorgen couple had owned a ""refuge"" for decades, was destroyed in a night-time fire. Under the immediate impression of this event Kallmorgen created the present work. The flickering blaze of the flames, the dramatic struggle of the firemen illuminated by the glow of the fire, the nocturnal inferno, so charming for the painter and so rich in contrast, was captured by Kallmorgen with rapid, impressionistic brushstrokes.Lot 1208, ""Siechenhäuser in Lübeck"", also appears to have been painted by the hand of an exact chronicler, with a very expressive composition: Seen close up, a house wall with a door and two windows running diagonally into the image space blocks the view. The detail of the image is chosen low, so that the door and window are cut off at the upper edge of the image. Five old people, staggered one behind the other, sit on chairs, stools or steps and look ahead. Four of them look towards the right edge of the image. Only the middle old woman in the middle looks out of the image at the viewer. The space in the image, so narrowed by the angle of view, the passive posture and the empty facial expressions of the five old people, but also the smallest details, such as a slightly protruding tongue of one woman or the thinning hair of another, make this large-format work so impressive. As narrow the pictorial space is, as limited are the possibilities of the short remaining life, when material possibilities do not open up spaces.There are magnificent images of the creation of this painting, which show Friedrich Kallmorgen and his students at work in front of their easels. In fact, the photos and also Kallmorgen's own sketches for this painting were not taken in Lübeck, but during an excursion with his students to Havelberg near Berlin in 1905.Friedrich Kallmorgen travelled a lot and was always looking for impressions, landscapes and motives, which he then - as it was usual in his time - composed into large works in his studio. On the spot, in nature, he made studies, created a repertoire of staff and landscapes and sometimes he collaged several of such elements to a narrative whole of a painting.A wonderful proof of this working method is the painting ""Feierstunde"" from 1913 (lot 1215). Already in 1911 Kallmorgen had worked out the motif of the deserted ""Plauer Schleuse"" with its atmospheric water reflections into a smaller painting. From the same year dates another small work ""Heimkehrende Fischer"". Two years later the painter ""weaved"" these two images and created the present large-format painting. The four fishermen standing in the boat as they glide through the mirror-smooth water towards the people waiting at the lock actually radiate an atmosphere which, in combination with the mighty, colourful trees in the background and the charming reflection in the water, is exaggerated to a solemnity.Friedrich Kallmorgen's favourite travel destinations were in Holland, and it was there that he created the earliest painting offered here, ""The Narrator"" from 1892 (lot 1209), which stylistically also belongs to the more austere, more graphic works. On a street at a Dutch harbour a group of young women and children listen to a man sitting on the ground. Another man smoking a pipe is leaning against the fence next to the narrator. The background with buildings and the hustle and bustle of the harbour, although elaborated in detail, becomes quite secondary. The small group of people, which is so closely knit and so concentrated on each other, captivates the viewer.The variety of Kallmorgen's thirteen works on offer here from the various style and motif groups shows impressively the high quality standards with which Rolf Kaletta has built up his collection. Starting with a first image of Hamburg, he has, with the help of Hans Knab, developed a holistic approach to the artist Friedrich Kallmorgen..
DC
alb3738892 Antonio Sarzanella de' Manfredi, Este Diplomat [obverse]. Dated: c. 1463. Dimensions: overall (diameter): 7.3 cm (2 7/8 in.). Medium: bronze. Museum: National Gallery of Art, Washington DC. Author: Sperandio.
DC
hx02784 Playful, laughing young couple taking selfie with camera phone on bicycle
RF

Total de Resultados: 25

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