Magnifier
Karl Schmidt-Rottluff. “Dünen und Mole”. 1917. Colour woodcut on laid paper. 28.8 × 33.8 cm (44.7 × 56.9 cm). EUR 6,000–8,000

The Leslie & Johanna Garfield Collection – Master Prints of the Expressionists

16 – 25 February 2024

Timed Auction

About the auction

There are many reasons to collect art. Some continue a tradition begun by their parents or grandparents. Others collect for pleasure, out of curiosity or ambition, or for the fun of being in the game. Probably all of them will find it hard to say when and under what circumstances they acquired their first work. Only those driven to collect by pure passion are likely to remember exactly how it all began. Leslie Garfield (1932-2022) can still recall every detail of that strange day in the fall of 1955 almost seventy years later.

In the mid-1950s, the native New Yorker was stationed as a GI in the American garrison in Würzburg. One day, he decided to drive to Munich to visit the museums with friends, a German couple. When they got there, the museums were still closed, so they looked around, eventually ending up in front of the display window of an art gallery. They went inside – and that’s when it happened. Initially, Leslie Garfield could not see the print in question, since it was on an easel facing away from him. But then it hit him. Garfield recounted the story to Susan Tallman, a journalist and specialist in graphic art, in 2021: “I was bowled over. I couldn’t take my eyes away; something had come over me. I had to look at the picture again and again.” Leslie naturally also recalled what happened next: “I enquired with the lady who ran the gallery about the print and asked how much it cost (55 US dollars). That was too much for a humble private, I felt, so I went to the museum with my friends.”

On the way back home in the car, he could not get the painting out of his head. “I told myself: you liked it, didn’t you? You’ve got the money. 55 dollars. You can afford that.” So two weeks later, he drove to Munich once again and bought the work: Erich Heckel’s woodcut print “Gegner” from 1912, which had been created as an illustration for a German edition of the novel “The Idiot” by Fyodor Dostoyevsky.

Leslie´s wife Johanna, whom he married in 1960, loved art just as much as he did, and she, too, became a passionate collector. She directed her (and his) interest towards the British Vorticist school, the Provincetown Art Colony on Cape Cod, and contemporary artists like David Hamilton, Diether Rot, Jasper Johns, David Hockney or Grayson Perry.

When Jo Garfield passed away in 2021 at the age of ninety, while preparations for the exhibition “British Prints, 1913 to 1939” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art were ongoing, the Garfields’ collection had grown to over 6,000 works. Leslie and Jo Garfield had close ties to the Metropolitan Museum thanks to their many generous donations. The “Modern Times” show was intended to celebrate the acquisition of 700 works by British artists, which would make it “one of the leading institutions worldwide in the field,” according to its Director Max Hollein.

Join us in discovering the exciting world of German Expressionism and find your favourite artwork in the Leslie & Johanna Garfield Collection.

All works from this auction will be on view until 24 February in Berlin at Fasanenstrasse 25:

Monday to Friday, 10am to 6.30pm
Saturday, 11am to 4pm
Grisebach
Fasanenstrasse 25, 10719 Berlin
T +49 30 885 915 0  auktionen@grisebach.com

Talk “Master Prints of the Expressionists – Neue Perspektiven“ at Grisebach on 20 February.
 

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Selected Results

Lot 1867

Otto Mueller

“Paar am Tisch”. 1922-25. Colour lithograph on paper. 38.5 × 29.2 cm (50.5 × 39.5 cm). Sold for 22,860 EUR (incl. premium)

Lot 1825

Willi Baumeister

“Komposition in Grün”. 1954. Colour silkscreen on wove paper. 42 × 51 cm. Sold for 4,318 EUR (incl. premium)

Lot 1836

Max Beckmann

“Day and Dream” (“Tag und Traum”). 1946. Original linen portfolio with 15 lithographs, each on paper. Portfolio: 42 × 31.5 × 1.1 cm. Sold for 25,400 EUR (incl. premium)

Lot 1837

Otto Dix

“Matrose und Mädchen”. 1923. Colour lithograph on laid paper. 48.3 × 37.4 cm (59.3 × 46.4 cm). EUR 11,430

Lot 1839

Lyonel Feininger

“Die grüne Brücke” (“Torbogen)”. 1910/11. Etching on Zanders laid paper. 27 × 19.9 cm (38.5 × 29.4 cm). Sold for 13,970 EUR (incl. premium)

Lot 1833

Max Beckmann

“Die Ringer”. 1921-22. Drypoint on wove paper. 20.3 × 14.6 cm (29.8 × 19.5 cm). Sold for 3,175 EUR (incl. premium)

Lot 1887

Karl Schmidt-Rottluff

“Frau mit aufgelöstem Haar”. 1913. Woodcut on laid paper. 35.5 × 29.8 cm (54.8 × 50.9 cm). Sold for 7,620 EUR (incl. premium)

Lot 1850

George Grosz

“Vor den Fabriken”. 1920/21. Photolithograph on laid paper. 32.7 × 25.5 cm (46 × 35.2 cm). Sold for 2,540 EUR (incl. premium)