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Catalogue

EARLIER ART CLASSICS

Date Beginning at Location Haus Gallery

Artworks

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1. Nikolai Kull Port of Tallinn. 1930s

Oil, canvas on cardboard. 43.0×58.0 cm

Starting price 3 600
Last bid 7 700
Final price 7 700
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2. Nigul Espe River Ship "Torm". 1938

Watercolor. 31.5×44.0 cm

Starting price 1 500
Last bid 1 600
Final price 1 600
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3. Richard Uutmaa Fishing Harbor in Pärnu. 1950

Oil, canvas. 61.0×96.5 cm

Starting price 7 900
Last bid 13 000
Final price 13 000
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4. Priidu Aavik Port of Tallinn. 1959

Oil, canvas. 54.5×73.3 cm

Starting price 5 900
Last bid -
Final price 3 800
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5. Nigul Espe Harbour in the Rain. 1962

Watercolor. 49.3×32.2 cm

Starting price 1 600
Last bid 2 900
Final price 2 900
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6. Nikolai Kormašov Port. 1963

Oil, canvas. 60.0×80.0 cm

Starting price 4 900
Last bid 5 700
Final price 5 700

CITY

Painting flowers does not always mean setting them in still lifes, but flowers have attracted the attention of artists both in vases and in free nature, both in bouquets and in more random connections. Flowers are admired either for their external form and richness of color, or they carry deeper symbolic meanings. Be that as it may, flower painting has always had its place in Estonian art history, and there are few authors in older art history who did not paint flowers.

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7. Karl Alexander von Winkler Boboli Gardens in Florence. 1906

Watercolor. 33.8×44.5 cm

Starting price 2 400
Last bid 2 400
Final price 2 400
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8. Andrus Johani A Slum Before Thunderstorm. 1935

Charcoal, pastel, paper. 31.2×40.8 cm

Starting price 2 200
Last bid 3 600
Final price 3 600
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9. Eduard Kutsar Stone Bridge in Tartu. 1920 - 1930s

Oil, canvas. 42.0×53.0 cm

Starting price 4 200
Last bid 7 400
Final price 7 400
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10. Nigul Espe Ruins Of St Mary's Church In Tartu. 1943

Oil, plywood. 28.0×40.8 cm

Starting price 1 800
Last bid 3 400
Final price 3 400
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11. Aleksander Pilar View of Tallinn. 1951

Watercolor. 30.3×40.2 cm

Starting price 1 600
Last bid 2 300
Final price 2 300
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12. Valerian Loik Backyard In Old Town. 1950s

Oil, canvas. 40.0×32.2 cm

Starting price 2 600
Last bid 6 800
Final price 6 800
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13. Henn Roode Market. 1960

Oil, cardboard. 37.6×48.5 cm

Starting price 4 100
Last bid 4 100
Final price 4 100
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14. Varmo Pirk In Kadriorg Park. 1965

Oil, cardboard. 70.0×50.0 cm

Starting price 3 400
Last bid 3 400
Final price 3 400
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15. Enn Volmere View of Võru. 1968

Oil, tempera, canvas. 79.0×93.0 cm

Starting price 3 100
Last bid 6 300
Final price 6 300
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16. Jüri Marran Karlova Motive. 1978

Oil, cardboard. 60.5×49.5 cm

Starting price 1 400
Last bid 1 400
Final price 1 400

HEROS OF OUR LIFE

In art history, as a rule, people who are in some way important and who guide the development of society are portrayed. Especially in commissioned art, kings, burghers and generals set the tone. But besides that, artists have always been interested in much simpler natures, which will always remain anonymous in history, but are still part of the social processes. Artists like to observe the immediate nature of such people and the faces that tell about life experience. Observing ordinary people in their everyday environment has undoubtedly fascinated authors in different times and places.

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17. Eerik Haamer Fishermen. 1948

Oil, canvas. 65.5×92.5 cm

Starting price 12 500
Last bid -
Final price
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18. Erich Pehap In an Exhibition. 1955

Oil, masonite. 61.0×76.5 cm

Starting price 3 900
Last bid 13 200
Final price 13 200
Make a bid
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19. Lepo Mikko Builders. 1963

Oil, tempera, canvas. 122.0×80.0 cm

Starting price 13 000
Last bid 25 500
Final price 25 500
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20. Nikolai Kormašov Fishermen. 1963

Oil, cardboard. 74.0×93.0 cm

Starting price 7 400
Last bid 8 300
Final price 8 300
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21. Henn Roode Swamp Drainers. 1963 - 1966

Oil, cardboard. 45.7×68.0 cm

Starting price 3 900
Last bid 6 300
Final price 6 300
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22. Elmar Kits Merry Company. 1967

Tempera, cardboard. 45.0×42.0 cm

Starting price 4 500
Last bid 8 100
Final price 8 100

VANGUARD

This chapter brings together one very unexpected and another very expected painting. Endel Kõks's avant-garde experiments are well known, and while living abroad he was able to delve into their research without hindrance. Erich Pehap, on the other hand, has not performed at the avant-garde front until now. We see a work completed as a schoolboy, and Pehap never returned to this style. But this is probably one of the characteristics of the avant-garde: it is always surprising.

 

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23. Erich Pehap Composition. 1931

Watercolor. 25.0×25.0 cm

Starting price 1 400
Last bid 1 400
Final price 1 400
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24. Endel Kõks In the Evening. 1958

Gouache, paper. 61.4×46.4 cm

Starting price 3 100
Last bid 3 100
Final price 3 100

KONRAD MÄGI

In recent years, Konrad Mägi has also been discovered by the international art community. There have been exhibitions in very prestigious museums in Rome, Turin, Espoo, Copenhagen, and at the end of November a large exhibition will be opened in Lillehammer. The international attention paid to Konrad Mägi's work proves that his extraordinary talent did not only shape the history of art in Estonia, but is an important part of the 20th century narrative of painting throughout Europe. According to foreign researchers, Mägi is mainly highlighted by two characteristics. First, his special use of color, where the color seems to glow internally and carries strong emotional impulses. Secondly, Mägi's treatment of nature, the intensity and vision of which is rarely seen.

The mapping of Mägi's works has made it possible to determine the location of almost 300 paintings. However, surprises still pop up occasionally. One of which the painting in this auction, which was in the collection of Estonians living in Australia for almost 80 years, and is coming back to Estonia for the first time.

 

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25. Konrad Mägi Norwegian Landscape. 1908 - 1910

Oil, paper. 25.4×33.2 cm

Starting price 64 000
Last bid 103 000
Final price 103 000

BACK TO THE HOMELAND

After the Second World War, many artists began to paint nature. It was one of the ways for them to distance themselves from politics, but also a way to hold on to the traditions of painting in Estonia, where landscape painting played an important role. Undoubtedly, for many authors, nature was still just a familiar place where they had spent their childhood and youth and whose dynamics they perceived with undisguised intensity. The joy of nature was not only known as a spectacle, but also as a natural environment where being in it was as natural as slipping your hand into your pocket.

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26. August Jansen The Yard of Lauri's Farm. 1945 - 1954

Oli, masonite. 84.0×102.0 cm

Starting price 8 100
Last bid 16 700
Final price 16 700
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27. Oskar Raunam Cow Milking in the Pasture. 1948

Oil, canvas. 46.5×61.6 cm

Starting price 3 600
Last bid 5 600
Final price 5 600
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28. Richard Uutmaa Winter Landscape with Pine Trees. 1956

Oil, cardboard. 50.0×70.0 cm

Starting price 5 900
Last bid 15 600
Final price 15 600
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29. Evald Okas View of Linnaveski, Karksi. 1956

Oil, canvas. 18.3×27.0 cm

Starting price 1 500
Last bid 4 600
Final price 4 600
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30. Richard Sagrits Haymaking in Karepa. 1958

Watercolour. 31.2×49.5 cm

Starting price 2 800
Last bid 2 800
Final price 2 800
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31. Johannes Saal Landscape. 1958

Oil, paper. 31.0×42.0 cm

Starting price 2 300
Last bid 4 000
Final price 4 000
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32. Elmar Kits Landscape with Windmill. 1959

Oil, canvas. 56.0×73.5 cm

Starting price 8 000
Last bid 18 100
Final price 18 100
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33. Karl Burman juunior Rannamõisa Coast. 1964

Watercolour. 58.5×78.5 cm

Starting price 2 100
Last bid 7 400
Final price 7 400

WOMEN

The tradition of depicting women in older Estonian paintings is controversial, as there are rather few images of emancipated women and women are often seen as an anonymous symbol or an object of male fantasies. The men in the paintings are usually working, thinking or posing, but the women just are. Sometimes it seems as if they came across the paintings semi-accidentally, in passing, their attitude lacks the activity that the artists wanted and they are rather observed than observers.

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34. Johannes Greenberg Two Women. 1940 - 1944

Oil, canvas. 74.5×63.4 cm

Starting price 17 000
Last bid 26 000
Final price 26 000
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35. Ado Vabbe Nude. 1940s

Oil, cardboard. 52.5×46.0 cm

Starting price 15 000
Last bid 15 000
Final price 15 000
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36. Eduard Ole Woman With Child and Birds. 1952

Watercolour, gouache. 46.5×38.0 cm

Starting price 3 400
Last bid 3 400
Final price 3 400
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37. Evald Okas Girl with a Scarf. 1967

Oil, cardboard. 32.7×47.8 cm

Starting price 1 800
Last bid 5 600
Final price 5 600

EYES

In older Estonian art, it is common that in figural compositions, that is, in paintings depicting several people, the faces are rendered sketchily, with just a few strokes. However, the eyes are always under special attention. Even if the eyes are not painted in detail and realistically, mood and psychology are concentrated in them.

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38. Johannes Greenberg Composition. 1940 - 1944

Oil, canvas. 110.5×135.5 cm

Starting price 28 000
Last bid 28 000
Final price 28 000
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39. Johannes Võerahansu Self-Portrait. 1944

Oli, plywood. 26.2×21.8 cm

Starting price 3 100
Last bid 3 500
Final price 3 500

KITCHEN

Surprisingly, this auction has included several paintings where the central scene is the kitchen. There are rooms that are depicted more often than others, but the kitchen is undoubtedly fascinating due to its various functions. In addition to practical purposes such as cooking, the kitchen has always been a social meeting place, as well as a place where the traditions and customs of the past are stored.

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40. Nikolai Kummits In the Kitchen. 1930s

Oil, canvas. 61.0×76.0 cm

Starting price 9 900
Last bid -
Final price 8 000
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41. Valerian Loik Farmhouse Kitchen. 1960 - 1970s

Oil, canvas. 69.0×74.0 cm

Starting price 2 900
Last bid -
Final price
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42. Boris Ninemäe Cooking In a Farm Kitchen. 1970s

Oil, canvas. 50.0×61.0 cm

Starting price 1 600
Last bid -
Final price

HOLIDAY

The frequency of depicting a working and active person is logical, since there is always drama and dramaturgy, tension and effort in activity. Painting a relaxing person, on the other hand, requires a completely different kind of attention, because you have to observe not muscle tension and focus, but instead relaxation and peace. Instead of doing, now the object of interest in the painting is doing nothing.

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43. Oskar Georg Adolf Hoffmann In the Tavern. 1880s

Oil, plywood. 14.0×18.0 cm

Starting price 4 100
Last bid 4 500
Final price 4 500
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44. Endel Kõks Mealtime. 1954

Oil, canvas. 51.0×32.0 cm

Starting price 4 600
Last bid 7 700
Final price 7 700
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45. Emma Siirak On the Lake. 1960s

Pastel, paper. 40.8×47.5 cm

Starting price 1 400
Last bid 3 400
Final price 3 400
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46. Valdur Ohakas Reflection of the Lake. 1973

Oil, canvas. 78.5×100.0 cm

Starting price 4 900
Last bid 9 900
Final price 9 900

FLOWERS

Painting flowers does not always mean setting them in still lifes, but flowers have attracted the attention of artists both in vases and in free nature, both in bouquets and in more random connections. Flowers are admired either for their external form and richness of color, or they carry deeper symbolic meanings. Be that as it may, flower painting has always had its place in Estonian art history, and there are few authors in older art history who did not paint flowers.

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47. Adamson-Eric Artist's Flowers. 1930s

Oil, canvas. 49.0×39.0 cm

Starting price 13 000
Last bid 38 500
Final price 38 500
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48. Johannes Võerahansu Flowers. 1946 - 1954

Oil, plywood. 84.0×62.7 cm

Starting price 6 800
Last bid 14 100
Final price 14 100
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49. Elmar Kits Flowers. 1967

Tempera, cardboard. 42.0×46.0 cm

Starting price 4 400
Last bid 5 600
Final price 5 600
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50. Viktor Leškin Field Flowers. 1984

Oil, canvas. 50.5×70.5 cm

Starting price 1 900
Last bid 2 500
Final price 2 500

LIGHT

Next to color, light has always been an important object of representation for painters. Rather, it is not an object, because light is the most difficult thing to put your finger on. We can recognize colors and brushstrokes on the surface of a painting, we can describe composition and motifs, but analyzing light is much more difficult. Artists often do not show the source of light, it seeps into colors and objects, is vague and yet total. Although elusive, light often defines the entire atmosphere of a painting.

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51. August Jansen Riverside View With Boats. 1929

Oil, canvas on cardboard. 43.0×31.5 cm

Starting price 2 600
Last bid 18 200
Final price 18 200
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52. Paul Burman Landscape With Birch Trees. 1920 - 1930s

Watercolour. 49.7×70.8 cm

Starting price 4 300
Last bid 4 500
Final price 4 500
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53. Andrei Jegorov Early Spring. 1930s

Tempera, paper. 33.0×48.4 cm

Starting price 4 900
Last bid -
Final price 5 000
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54. Olga Terri Boulevard. 1950s

Oil, cardboard. 34.4×49.4 cm

Starting price 1 400
Last bid 2 900
Final price 2 900
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55. Richard Uutmaa Coast of Saaremaa. 1960

Oil, canvas. 65.0×81.0 cm

Starting price 7 800
Last bid 14 000
Final price 14 000
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56. Joann Voldemar Saarniit Autumn Charms. 1969

Oil, masonite. 44.3×101.4 cm

Starting price 2 400
Last bid 4 800
Final price 4 800
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57. Olav Maran Stones on the Viimsi Coast. 1982

Gouache, tempera. 61.0×69.0 cm

Starting price 4 200
Last bid 4 200
Final price 4 200
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58. Evald Okas Spring. 1988

Oil, cardboard. 50.0×71.0 cm

Starting price 3 100
Last bid 9 500
Final price 9 500