Feb 29, 2024 - Sale 2660

Sale 2660 - Lot 212

Price Realized: $ 2,750
?Final Price Realized includes Buyer’s Premium added to Hammer Price
Estimate: $ 4,000 - $ 6,000

ALBERT WEISGERBER (1878-1915)

PRESSE FEST. 1913.


71x38¾ inches, 180¼x98½ cm. G. Schuh, [Munich].
Condition B: repaired tears at edges; water staining, foxing, rippling, creases and abrasions in margins and image; overpainting along vertical and horizontal folds. Two-sheets. Mounted on thick paper.

Weisgerber was a founding member of the New Secession in Munich and he was a frequent contributor to Jugend. He studied art under Franz von Stuck and Gabriel von Hackl and was renowned for his paintings. His few posters stand out, as they are filled with wit and unexpectedly vivid colors. Presse Fest is definitely his wildest, and most irreverent piece. His image is a comic take-off on Richard Strauss' opera Salomé. To mock the most respected work of one of Austria's most beloved composers is in and of itself insolent; but add the bright colors and the crazy scene and you end up with what could well be the most daring German poster of the period. Its graphic approach clearly announces Art Deco, as the image is virtually interchangeable with a 1920s-era cabaret poster. Plakate in München 334, DFP-III 3377.