FEININGER LYONEL (1871-1956)

Lot 266
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Estimation :
10000 - 15000 EUR
Result with fees
Result : 20 800EUR
FEININGER LYONEL (1871-1956)
Signed correspondence of 15 handwritten letters and one typographical letter addressed to Wilhelm and Elisabeth MAYER Zehlendorf, Weimar, New York and Stockbridge, 22 November 1917-21 July 1948, 30 in-4 pages in ink on paper of different colours. Three letters in English. Seven letters with xylographic printing header (one of them coloured). One letter with watercolour. Rich and detailed letters addressed to Wilhelm and Elisabeth Mayer in Munich, Tübingen and New York. They were among the most important collectors of Feininger's works, who told them about the delicate financial and artistic situation during the war and his exhibition plans. He often referred to other artists of his time (Barlach, Lehmbruck, Heckel, Klee etc.). - Zehlendorf-Mitte, 22 November 1917: Announces the sending of a series of drawings. Zehlendorf-Mitte, February 23, 1918: "[...] For the time being and as long as this war lasts, I remain enclosed within my four walls although I dream of going on a trip (a change would do me so much good on a human as well as on an artistic level!), but I am an American citizen and the idea that I could be spotted and considered as "suspicious" is simply unbearable to me! Since 1914, I have become a real hermit, a very fierce hermit. I can't be happy about it but we are all in the same situation and we all do our best to keep our heads high! Zehlendorf-Mitte, April 27, 1918: "I would tend to say that I am on the verge of succumbing little by little to what is called in English 'a broken heart . It seems to be a kind of emotional disorder and some of my relatives and friends are suffering from the same evil. The mind has lost its elasticity and this is immediately reflected in the artistic work and then we find ourselves in a vicious circle: our state of mind makes our creative work difficult and the result is sometimes a real failure that makes the artist sink back into melancholy and so on....Zehlendorf-Mitte, 10 May 1918: "... t
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