Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
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Displaying 145 - 156 of 491
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $200
Sold for: $300
Including buyer's premium
Bereshit A, Moscow-Leningrad, 1926. Printed in Berlin by Gutenberg Press. Front cover illustration in the Russian avant-garde style by Joseph Tchaikov. “Illustration of the B. Shovin Publishing House Emblem.”
Literary anthology, no other volumes printed. The writers' group that published the book was unable to find a printing press in the Soviet Union prepared to print a Hebrew book, and the manuscript was therefore sent to Berlin for printing. Only a small portion of the printed copies were allowed into the Soviet Union. [1], 199, [5] pp, 23cm. Good condition. Minor spotting, creases (mainly to first leaves). Minor damages to binding.
Literary anthology, no other volumes printed. The writers' group that published the book was unable to find a printing press in the Soviet Union prepared to print a Hebrew book, and the manuscript was therefore sent to Berlin for printing. Only a small portion of the printed copies were allowed into the Soviet Union. [1], 199, [5] pp, 23cm. Good condition. Minor spotting, creases (mainly to first leaves). Minor damages to binding.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $500
Sold for: $625
Including buyer's premium
1-2. Mefisto, Uri Zvi Greenberg. Warsaw: literature fund, 1922. 2nd edition. A poem by Uri Zvi Grinberg. Design of cover by Wolf Weintraub, font of title page designed by Grinberg himself. Author's portrait by Henryk Berlewi.
Bound together with: di kupe [the pile], Peretz Markish. Warsaw: Kultur lige, 1922. 1st edition. Composition on the cover created by Henryk Berlewi, interacts with the title of Markish's poem and resembles "a pile" [di kupe].
85, [2] pp;32 pp. 31.5 cm. Good condition. Damages to front cover of "mefisto" (back cover – missing). Minor spotting. Binding somewhat loose.
3. Min HaChachlil uMin HaKachol – Uri Zvi Grinberg. Tel-Aviv: Haaretz printing press, 1950. In the colophon: "the poems…corrected for printing….with some changes…the book was published in seventy seven copies according to the author's wish". 41, [2] pp, 24.5 cm. Paper of good quality, title page with characters in red ink. Good condition. Minor spotting. Tears and spotting on cover.
4. HaGavrut HaOla, Uri Zvi Grinberg. Tel-Aviv: "Sadan",1926. 32 pp, 32 cm. Good condition. Creases and tears (mainly to cover).
Bound together with: di kupe [the pile], Peretz Markish. Warsaw: Kultur lige, 1922. 1st edition. Composition on the cover created by Henryk Berlewi, interacts with the title of Markish's poem and resembles "a pile" [di kupe].
85, [2] pp;32 pp. 31.5 cm. Good condition. Damages to front cover of "mefisto" (back cover – missing). Minor spotting. Binding somewhat loose.
3. Min HaChachlil uMin HaKachol – Uri Zvi Grinberg. Tel-Aviv: Haaretz printing press, 1950. In the colophon: "the poems…corrected for printing….with some changes…the book was published in seventy seven copies according to the author's wish". 41, [2] pp, 24.5 cm. Paper of good quality, title page with characters in red ink. Good condition. Minor spotting. Tears and spotting on cover.
4. HaGavrut HaOla, Uri Zvi Grinberg. Tel-Aviv: "Sadan",1926. 32 pp, 32 cm. Good condition. Creases and tears (mainly to cover).
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $6,000
Sold for: $13,750
Including buyer's premium
Tsveyuntsvantsik – lider [22 – poems], Yehiel Feiner. Warsaw: Kultur-Lige, 1931. Yiddish.
Poetry book published by Yehiel Di-Nur (Ka Tsetnik) in Warsaw, before the war, when he was 22 years old (“Tsveyuntsvantsik Lider; Tsveyuntsvantsik Yoren” = twenty two poems, twenty two years”). Illustration on last page by the artist Yitzchak Broyner.
Author Yehiel Di-Nur (formerly Feiner, 1909-2001), native of Sosnowiec, Poland, an Auschwitz concentration camp survivor (where he lost all his family), is known as one of the most important authors who wrote about the Holocaust. Di-Nur arrived with “HaBricha” to Israel, through Italy, and there devoted his life to writing about his experiences in the camp. While writing his books, Di-Nur was said to go back to “the planet of Auschwitz”, secluded in his room, dressed in his prisoner’s clothes, without showering, eating nor sleeping for days. His books, including some very disturbing depictions, were written while he remained totally anonymous, using his pen name “Ka Tsetnik”.
Di-Nur’s identity was revealed during the Eichmann Trial when he was summoned to testify. When the prosecutor asked: “why are you hiding behind your pen name ‘Ka Tsetnik’?” Di-Nur replied: “This is not a pen name. I do not consider myself an author writing literature. This is the chronicle of the Auschwitz planet. I was there for about two years. Time there is not like here, on our planet. Each fraction of a minute turns on a different time wheel. The inhabitants of that planet did not have names. They did not have parents or children. They did not dress like we dress here. They were not born there and they did not give birth…they did not live by the laws of this world and they did not die. Their name was the number “Ka Tsetnik”.
During the years after the war, whenever Di-Nur learned about the existence of copies of his early book Tsveyuntsvantsik, he destroyed the copies he came across with by burning or cutting them. In the end of 1993, in a letter to Shlomo Goldberg, the head of the circulation department of the National Library of Israel in Jerusalem, Di-Nur wrote: “In 1953 I was informed, while being in New-York, that ‘the book’ by the author who perished in Auschwitz is exhibited in the National Library as a rare exhibit, under glass, I went to the library, presented my Pen card [PEN – International organization of authors, editors and poets] and said that I am an Israeli author who writes the life story of this author who perished, I got the book, walked out of the library and burned the book.
About thirty years ago, someone in Tel-Aviv told me that ‘the book’ exists in the National Library in Jerusalem. I went to Jerusalem, and it turned out that the director of the library knew who I was. I did not need to ‘cheat’ in order to get the book, I left the library and burned ‘the book’.
A few months ago I heard from two students, who follow the life of Ka Tsetnik, that ‘the book’ is in the National Library in Jerusalem. And the rest is known […].
I have one more request: as a token and testimony I attached here remainders of ‘the book’, please burn them just as my world and all that was dear to me was burnt in the Auschwitz crematorium”.
In the year 2011 the remnants of “Tsveyuntsvantsik” shreds were exhibited in the National Library in Jerusalem in an exhibition “Unrivaled Unrevealed – Select Treasures of the National Library” (Jerusalem, 2011; pp.52-53), side by side with manuscripts by the Rambam, Isaac Newton, Martin Buber, Franz Kafka, S.Y. Agnon and some other very rare items.
62, [1] pp, 11.5X17.5 cm. Fair-good condition. Spots and moisture marks. Professionally restored tears. Dark spots where binding pins were (removed). Adhesive tape on title page. Inscriptions in pen on page 10 (ink spread on nearby pages). Missing corner on last leaf. No cover. New binding.
Very rare, we do not know of any other existing copies.
Poetry book published by Yehiel Di-Nur (Ka Tsetnik) in Warsaw, before the war, when he was 22 years old (“Tsveyuntsvantsik Lider; Tsveyuntsvantsik Yoren” = twenty two poems, twenty two years”). Illustration on last page by the artist Yitzchak Broyner.
Author Yehiel Di-Nur (formerly Feiner, 1909-2001), native of Sosnowiec, Poland, an Auschwitz concentration camp survivor (where he lost all his family), is known as one of the most important authors who wrote about the Holocaust. Di-Nur arrived with “HaBricha” to Israel, through Italy, and there devoted his life to writing about his experiences in the camp. While writing his books, Di-Nur was said to go back to “the planet of Auschwitz”, secluded in his room, dressed in his prisoner’s clothes, without showering, eating nor sleeping for days. His books, including some very disturbing depictions, were written while he remained totally anonymous, using his pen name “Ka Tsetnik”.
Di-Nur’s identity was revealed during the Eichmann Trial when he was summoned to testify. When the prosecutor asked: “why are you hiding behind your pen name ‘Ka Tsetnik’?” Di-Nur replied: “This is not a pen name. I do not consider myself an author writing literature. This is the chronicle of the Auschwitz planet. I was there for about two years. Time there is not like here, on our planet. Each fraction of a minute turns on a different time wheel. The inhabitants of that planet did not have names. They did not have parents or children. They did not dress like we dress here. They were not born there and they did not give birth…they did not live by the laws of this world and they did not die. Their name was the number “Ka Tsetnik”.
During the years after the war, whenever Di-Nur learned about the existence of copies of his early book Tsveyuntsvantsik, he destroyed the copies he came across with by burning or cutting them. In the end of 1993, in a letter to Shlomo Goldberg, the head of the circulation department of the National Library of Israel in Jerusalem, Di-Nur wrote: “In 1953 I was informed, while being in New-York, that ‘the book’ by the author who perished in Auschwitz is exhibited in the National Library as a rare exhibit, under glass, I went to the library, presented my Pen card [PEN – International organization of authors, editors and poets] and said that I am an Israeli author who writes the life story of this author who perished, I got the book, walked out of the library and burned the book.
About thirty years ago, someone in Tel-Aviv told me that ‘the book’ exists in the National Library in Jerusalem. I went to Jerusalem, and it turned out that the director of the library knew who I was. I did not need to ‘cheat’ in order to get the book, I left the library and burned ‘the book’.
A few months ago I heard from two students, who follow the life of Ka Tsetnik, that ‘the book’ is in the National Library in Jerusalem. And the rest is known […].
I have one more request: as a token and testimony I attached here remainders of ‘the book’, please burn them just as my world and all that was dear to me was burnt in the Auschwitz crematorium”.
In the year 2011 the remnants of “Tsveyuntsvantsik” shreds were exhibited in the National Library in Jerusalem in an exhibition “Unrivaled Unrevealed – Select Treasures of the National Library” (Jerusalem, 2011; pp.52-53), side by side with manuscripts by the Rambam, Isaac Newton, Martin Buber, Franz Kafka, S.Y. Agnon and some other very rare items.
62, [1] pp, 11.5X17.5 cm. Fair-good condition. Spots and moisture marks. Professionally restored tears. Dark spots where binding pins were (removed). Adhesive tape on title page. Inscriptions in pen on page 10 (ink spread on nearby pages). Missing corner on last leaf. No cover. New binding.
Very rare, we do not know of any other existing copies.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Dos Gevet, Dialogen Wegen Sprach un Kultur [dialogues about language and culture], Noah Prilutski. Warsaw: Kultur Lige, 1923. Yiddish.
Composition about the etymology of Yiddish and its dialects, written as dialogues between Kalman and Sender.
Noah Prilutski (1882-1941) – linguist, journalist and political leader of Polish Jewry between the two world wars. Founder of the paper "Der Moment".
Illustration on the cover by Henryk Berlewi. [3], 159, XCVIII, 21 cm. Original cover mounted on a hard cover (somewhat chopped), faults at cover's edges. Minor spotting.
Composition about the etymology of Yiddish and its dialects, written as dialogues between Kalman and Sender.
Noah Prilutski (1882-1941) – linguist, journalist and political leader of Polish Jewry between the two world wars. Founder of the paper "Der Moment".
Illustration on the cover by Henryk Berlewi. [3], 159, XCVIII, 21 cm. Original cover mounted on a hard cover (somewhat chopped), faults at cover's edges. Minor spotting.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Yidishe yomtoivim… by Prof. N. [Nikolai Michaelovitz Nikolski]. Translation into Yiddish from a manuscript: H. Meisel and Uri Finkel. Minsk: Vaysrusland melukhe farlag, 1925. Yiddish.
A book about Jewish "Yomtoivim" [holidays] – origins and development through the generations. Cover illustrated by the painter Meir Axelrod (1902-1970). [4], 154,[1] pp, 23 cm. Good condition. Creases. Professionally restored tears. Original cover. Re-bound in a hard cover.
A book about Jewish "Yomtoivim" [holidays] – origins and development through the generations. Cover illustrated by the painter Meir Axelrod (1902-1970). [4], 154,[1] pp, 23 cm. Good condition. Creases. Professionally restored tears. Original cover. Re-bound in a hard cover.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $400
Sold for: $500
Including buyer's premium
Über den Traum [On Dreams], by Dr. Sigmund Freud. Wiesbaden: J.F. Bergmann, 1901. German. 1st edition.
"Über den Traum" is a shortened version of the book Die Traumdeutung – The Interpretation of Dreams, by Sigmund Freud. This version was composed when the complete version, published in 1900, did not gain much success. Presented here is the first edition, published separately, as issue no. 8 of the periodical Grenzfragen des Nerven- und Seelenlebens.
[4], 308-344, [14] pp, 26 cm. Good-fair condition. Minor spots. Cover and some leaves are detached. Minor tears.
"Über den Traum" is a shortened version of the book Die Traumdeutung – The Interpretation of Dreams, by Sigmund Freud. This version was composed when the complete version, published in 1900, did not gain much success. Presented here is the first edition, published separately, as issue no. 8 of the periodical Grenzfragen des Nerven- und Seelenlebens.
[4], 308-344, [14] pp, 26 cm. Good-fair condition. Minor spots. Cover and some leaves are detached. Minor tears.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $250
Sold for: $450
Including buyer's premium
Otzar Beduyey HaShem, Index of pen-names in Hebrew literature…, Shaul Chajes. Vienna, 1933. First edition.
An edition of 250 numbered copies, this copy is number 107. On back cover is embossed a decoration by the artist Uriel Birnbaum.
XIV, 335, 1, 10, [5], 66 pp. 24.5 cm. Very good condition. Spotting on edges of leaves. Not original end paper.
An edition of 250 numbered copies, this copy is number 107. On back cover is embossed a decoration by the artist Uriel Birnbaum.
XIV, 335, 1, 10, [5], 66 pp. 24.5 cm. Very good condition. Spotting on edges of leaves. Not original end paper.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $500
Unsold
Five books by Ephraim Deinard (1846-1930). Hebrew.Deinard was a bibliographer and Hebrew writer, book collector and book seller; one of the greatest Hebrew bibliographers in modern times. Historian and polemicist; his books were often criticized. Deinard is considered as a provocative author who had no inhibitions when writing about controversial subjects. His early literary work dealt with Jews in inner Russia – Crimea and the Karaite Jews. He immigrated from Russia to the USA in the 1890s and there he published his books about the Hasidut and Zionism.
1. Machberet Cherev Chadah, written in German language by Rabbi Israel Label, deputy rabbi of Novardok and translated into Hebrew by Ephraim Deinard, Kearny, New Jersey, [1904].
2. Megila Afa by Rabbi Yitzchak Ber Levinsohn, with foreword by the publisher Ephraim Deinard. Kearny, New Jersey, [1904].
3. Pachadu BeZion Chata’im, Arlington, New-Jersey, [1917].
4. Zion Be’ad Mi? (Zion for whom?) for Bolsheviks or Jews? Arlington, New-Jersey, [1918].
5. HaYa’ar Be-ein Dov. St. Louis, [1929].
Sizes and conditions vary.
1. Machberet Cherev Chadah, written in German language by Rabbi Israel Label, deputy rabbi of Novardok and translated into Hebrew by Ephraim Deinard, Kearny, New Jersey, [1904].
2. Megila Afa by Rabbi Yitzchak Ber Levinsohn, with foreword by the publisher Ephraim Deinard. Kearny, New Jersey, [1904].
3. Pachadu BeZion Chata’im, Arlington, New-Jersey, [1917].
4. Zion Be’ad Mi? (Zion for whom?) for Bolsheviks or Jews? Arlington, New-Jersey, [1918].
5. HaYa’ar Be-ein Dov. St. Louis, [1929].
Sizes and conditions vary.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $300
Sold for: $375
Including buyer's premium
Shibolim Bodedot, essays that I collected from single leaves – manuscripts and printed leaves, documents, certificates…which were lost during the years…by Ephraim Deinard. Jerusalem: A.M. Lunz printing press, [1915].
Letters, manuscripts, Ketubot, riddle-poems and wedding-poems, eulogies, and more – all copied by Deinard. Printed in one hundred copies. [2], 182 pp, 22.5 cm. Body of book in good condition. Binding torn, detached. Some loose leaves.
Letters, manuscripts, Ketubot, riddle-poems and wedding-poems, eulogies, and more – all copied by Deinard. Printed in one hundred copies. [2], 182 pp, 22.5 cm. Body of book in good condition. Binding torn, detached. Some loose leaves.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $1,800
Unsold
Der Babylonische Talmud / Babylonian Talmud, six orders of the Mishnah. Printed according to the first edition of Daniel Bomberg in Venice…with altered versions …all done by Eliezer Goldschmidt. Berlin-Vienna: Benjamin Harz, 1925. German and Hebrew. Eight volumes.
Babylonian Talmud, with translation into German by Eliezer (Lazarus) Goldschmidt. Includes all of the Talmudic tractates, except for a part of Kodashim and Taharot. 8 volumes, 32 cm. Overall good condition. Several tears and loose leaves to seventh volume. Damages to bindings.
Babylonian Talmud, with translation into German by Eliezer (Lazarus) Goldschmidt. Includes all of the Talmudic tractates, except for a part of Kodashim and Taharot. 8 volumes, 32 cm. Overall good condition. Several tears and loose leaves to seventh volume. Damages to bindings.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $350
Sold for: $450
Including buyer's premium
A Jewish Iconography, Alfred Rubens. London: Nonpareil, 1981. English. Revised edition.
Copy no. 32 out of 650 copies. An exceptional lexicon of Jewish art and craft which contains bibliographical records of the collection of engravings, prints and portraits of Rubens, encompassing five hundred years of Jewish history. The book contains pictures of the collection which includes many engravings with Jewish figures and inscriptions in Hebrew. Alfred Rubens (1903-1998) – collector and historian who served as the director of the London Jewish Museum during the years 1958-1983.
277 pp, 30 cm. Very good condition.
Copy no. 32 out of 650 copies. An exceptional lexicon of Jewish art and craft which contains bibliographical records of the collection of engravings, prints and portraits of Rubens, encompassing five hundred years of Jewish history. The book contains pictures of the collection which includes many engravings with Jewish figures and inscriptions in Hebrew. Alfred Rubens (1903-1998) – collector and historian who served as the director of the London Jewish Museum during the years 1958-1983.
277 pp, 30 cm. Very good condition.
Catalogue
Auction 38 - Jewish and Israeli History and Culture, Israeli and International Art
May 14, 2014
Opening: $450
Sold for: $563
Including buyer's premium
Solomon’s temple and capitol, ark of the flood and tabernacle, or, The holy houses of the Hebrew, Chaldee, Syriac, Samaritan, Septuagint, Coptic, and Itala scriptures, Josephus, Talmud, and rabbis, by Timothy Otis Paine. London: S. Low, Marston, Searle & Rivington, 1886. English.
Study by the author Timothy Paine, conducted during 33 years. Paine tried to reconstruct, on the basis of various manuscripts, the structure of the first Temple, the holy compound and the structure of Noah's ark.
X, 198 pp; 42 plates. Particularly heavy volume, 39 cm. Eleborate binding (new). Original paper-cover bound at the end of the volume. Edge-gilded leaves. Overall good condition, minor spotting.
Study by the author Timothy Paine, conducted during 33 years. Paine tried to reconstruct, on the basis of various manuscripts, the structure of the first Temple, the holy compound and the structure of Noah's ark.
X, 198 pp; 42 plates. Particularly heavy volume, 39 cm. Eleborate binding (new). Original paper-cover bound at the end of the volume. Edge-gilded leaves. Overall good condition, minor spotting.
Catalogue