Auction 100 – Important Hebrew Manuscripts and Books from the Victor (Avigdor) Klagsbald Collection
Jan 21, 2025
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Auction 100 – Important Hebrew Manuscripts and Books from the Victor (Avigdor) Klagsbald Collection
Jan 21, 2025
Opening: $5,000
Estimate: $8,000 - $10,000
Sold for: $7,500
Including buyer's premium
Presumed miniature oval portrait of R. Samson Wertheimer. Unknown artist (unsigned). [Presumably Central Europe, late 19th century?]. Watercolor on celluloid(?).
Miniature portrait, created in keeping with the finest tradition of European portrait art. Portraits of this type were typically painted on wood, bone, or thin parchment, cut into an oval shape. This type of art was also prevalent among Jews, and a number of Jewish artists are known to have produced miniature portraits – often with rabbis as subjects – in Europe and England, from the 17th through the 19th centuries (see: Franz Landsberger, Einführung in die jüdische Kunst, Berlin, 1935, pp. 39-40).
On verso of frame is pasted a note from Kalgsbald's personal catalogue, identifying the depicted figure as R. Samson Wertheimer.
The Court Jew,
R. Samson Wertheimer (1658-1724), Rabbi of Vienna and Chief Rabbi of the Hungarian countries. Also served as a Rabbi of Prague and Worms. Frequently interceded on behalf of his fellow Jews, taking advantage of his close relations with the Austro-Hungarian monarchy and its government ministers. In his day, he was regarded as both the spiritual and political leader of Central European Jewry. He was fondly dubbed with the title "Judenkaiser" (Jewish emperor). Various tales and stories about him became the stuff of legend, relating to his great wealth and charity. He also maintained close relations with the Jews of Turkey and Eretz Israel, and was appointed as "Prince of the Land of Israel".
R. Samson Wertheimer (1658-1724), Rabbi of Vienna and Chief Rabbi of the Hungarian countries. Also served as a Rabbi of Prague and Worms. Frequently interceded on behalf of his fellow Jews, taking advantage of his close relations with the Austro-Hungarian monarchy and its government ministers. In his day, he was regarded as both the spiritual and political leader of Central European Jewry. He was fondly dubbed with the title "Judenkaiser" (Jewish emperor). Various tales and stories about him became the stuff of legend, relating to his great wealth and charity. He also maintained close relations with the Jews of Turkey and Eretz Israel, and was appointed as "Prince of the Land of Israel".
Painting: approx. 11X9 cm. Frame: approx. 16.5X19 cm. Gilt frame, old. Minor damage to painting and frame. Portrait fractured into two parts (lengthwise fracture in right third).
Category
Rabbinical Portraits
Catalogue
Auction 100 – Important Hebrew Manuscripts and Books from the Victor (Avigdor) Klagsbald Collection
Jan 21, 2025
Opening: $8,000
Estimate: $15,000 - $20,000
Sold for: $10,625
Including buyer's premium
Portrait of R. Jacob Moses son of R. Saul Löwenstamm, Rabbi of the Ashkenazi community in Amsterdam, attributed to Jan Kamphuys (Kamphuysen / Kamphuijsen, 1760-1841). [The Netherlands, presumably late 18th or early 19th centuries]. Oil on wood. Unsigned.
R. Jacob Moses Löwenstamm (1744/48-1815) served as Rabbi of Amsterdam from 1793, on the seat of his father, the renowned R. Saul Löwenstamm (1717-1790; grandson of the "Chacham Tzvi"), and was the fourth of his family to serve as Chief Rabbi in the Ashkenazi community of Amsterdam. Earlier, R. Jacob Moses served as Rabbi of Wieleń (today, Poland). For further information, see: Meir Wunder, Elef Margaliot, p. 564.
For comparison, see: M.H. Gans, Memorbook, p. 287 (print after painting by same artist, dated 1793); Christie's, Amsterdam, June 20, 1990, Lot 156 (painting similar to the present portrait, with Hebrew inscription; unsigned, apparently by same artist).
Painting: approx. 23.5X18.5 cm. Frame: approx. 38X30 cm. Gilt frame, old, damaged.
Category
Rabbinical Portraits
Catalogue
Lot 3 Portrait of Rabbi Moses Nasch, Rabbi of Zwolle – Oil on Canvas – The Netherlands, 19th Century
Auction 100 – Important Hebrew Manuscripts and Books from the Victor (Avigdor) Klagsbald Collection
Jan 21, 2025
Opening: $7,000
Estimate: $10,000 - $12,000
Sold for: $8,750
Including buyer's premium
Portrait of R. Moses Nasch. Unknown artist (unsigned). [Presumably the Netherlands, 19th century]. Oil on canvas, mounted on wood panel.
The portrait is enclosed within an illustrated round frame supported by three books. Under the portrait is the inscription: "Depiction of the splendid countenance of the sage… R. Moses Nasch Rabbi of Zwolle and the region".
R. Moses ben Joel Nasch (alternatively, MiNasch) served for some thirty years as posek in Nijkerk, Gelderland. In 1802, he was appointed as Rabbi of Zwolle, Overijssel. He passed away in Elul 1807. In the introduction to his book, Yismach Moshe (Leiden, 1771), he recounts his life story in flowery Hebrew, stating that as a young man, he wandered from one city to the next, sermonizing to the Jewish public at large, "showing the people the path to teshuvah, and instructing them on how to mend their ways". At one point in time, he fell victim to false charges and was consequently imprisoned by the authorities, but was released thanks to petitions delivered on his behalf by R. Saul Rabbi of Amsterdam, and his brother-in-law, R. Saul HaLevi Rabbi of The Hague. Following his marriage, after receiving rabbinical ordination from R. Saul of Amsterdam, he was appointed as posek in Nijkerk. Toward the end of his life, he served as Rabbi of Zwolle. In addition to Yismach Moshe, he published a prayer order – entitled "Mizmor Shir Chanukat HaBayit" (Amsterdam, 1801) – on the occasion of the inauguration of the synagogue in Nijkerk.
The three books pictured underneath the portrait represent the works of R. Moses Nasch: Yismach Moshe, VaYoel Moshe, and VaYaster Moshe; of the three, only Yismach Moshe (published, as previously stated, in 1771) is known to have survived. An engraving bearing an almost identical portrait of R. Moses Nasch was printed in the Netherlands in the early 19th century (the three books appear there with the aforementioned titles), and possibly, it was based upon the present oil painting.
See: M.H. Gans, Memorbook, p. 263 (engraving by A. Joëls of Zwolle). See also Kedem, Auction 95, Lot 363.
Painting: approx. 27X20 cm. Frame: approx. 39.5X33.5 cm. Gilt frame, old. Inscription on back of frame: "Joel S fecit". Damage to painting and frame.
Provenance: Acquired in Amsterdam, Speyer Antiquariat, 1949.
Category
Rabbinical Portraits
Catalogue