Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
Including: Items from the Estate of Ruth Dayan, Old Master Works, Israeli Art and Numismatics
December 21, 2021
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Displaying 109 - 120 of 389
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Five books inscribed by their authors to Prof. Joseph Klausner. Tel-Aviv, Jerusalem and Berlin, 1923-1939. Hebrew.
1. "Bametzar", anthology of stories by Zalman Shneur. Berlin: Hasefer, 1923. Inscribed by the author (inscription dated 1923): "To my editor and friend Joseph Klausner, in memory of the Odessa days, a token of honor and friendship, by Z. Shneur". 2. "Kos Ktana", by Elisheva (nom de plume of the poet Elizaveta Ivanovna Zhirkov-Bikhovsky). Tel-Aviv: Tomer, 1926. Inscribed by the author (inscription dated 1926): "To Prof. J. Klausner, as a token of friendship and admiration by Elisheva". 3. "A Poet and a Man: On Alexander Blok's Poetry", by Elisheva. Tel-Aviv: Tomer, 1929. Title page inscribed by the author (inscription dated 1929): "To Prof. J. Klausner, with feelings of deep admiration, Elisheva". (Inscribed page trimmed with some damage to text). 4. "Kiron LeHitchayut Datenu BeArtza", by Itamar Ben Avi. Jerusalem: Azriel, 1935. Title page inscribed by the author (inscription dated 1935) "To Prof. Dr. Joseph Klausner, with admiration and gratitude for his letter on this question, Itamar Ben Avi". 5. The Hound of Heaven by Francis Thompson, Hebrew translation by Shaul Tchernichovsky. Tel-Aviv: Yedidi, 1939. Hebrew and English. Hebrew title page inscribed by Tchernichovsky (inscription dated 1939, several months after the outbreak of World War II): "To Joseph from Shaul, is there place these horrible days for such a book?".
Size and condition vary. Inked stamps of the Prof. Joseph Klausner memorial library.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $100
Sold for: $200
Including buyer's premium
Postcard handwritten and signed by S.Y. Agnon (signed "S.Y. Czaczkes"), addressed to his brother-in-law Moshe (Moses) Marx in Berlin. Wiesbaden, [July 1921]. Hebrew.
Postcard sent by S.Y. Agnon to his brother in law in Berlin, Moshe (Moses) Marx. Agnon informs him about his intention to travel to Königsberg to visit his wife Esther and their daughter Emunah, who was born not long before: "Lord willing, tomorrow Monday July 17 or on Tuesday July 18, I will be going to Königsberg to see my daughter, whom my wife Esther gave birth to". He adds: "I will be delighted if his honor gives me a place to sleep in his home for one night". Following his signature, "Y.S. Czaczkes", Agnon writes: "If you may, please ask Mr. Stybel in Berlin?" [referring to Avraham Yosef Stybel (1885-1946), wealthy merchant; founder of the Stybel publishing house]. In his book "Chaye Agnon" [The Life of Agnon], Dan Laor writes about the birth of Agnon's eldest daughter, Emunah, and about this postcard (Hebrew; p. 145): "In late June, when her due date was nearing, Esther left Wiesbaden and as was customary those days, went to give birth close to her family. After a day-and-a-half-long train ride she arrived in Königsberg […] on July 2, Agnon was informed that his wife gave birth to a daughter. The news made him very happy, yet two weeks passed since the birth until the day he decided to leave Wiesbaden for Königsberg. On July 16, Agnon sent a postcard to his brother-in-law Moshe Marx informing him that he intended to have a layover in Berlin on his way to Königsberg […] on this occasion, he asked him to arrange a meeting with the publisher Stybel. Agnon remained in Königsberg until the end of July […]".
Moshe (Moses) Marx (1885-1973), bibliographer, merchant and well-known book-collector, contributed to Hebrew literature by studying incunabula and 16th century publishing; co-founder of the Soncino Society (Soncino Gesellschaft; The Soncino Society of Friends of the Jewish Book). His sister, Esther (Esterlein) was Agnon's wife.
9X14 cm. Good condition.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $500
Sold for: $1,063
Including buyer's premium
Eleven letters, handwritten and signed by Shai (Shmuel Yosef) Agnon, addressed to Ephraim Broido. Jerusalem, 1940s to 1960s.
The present letters mostly relate to the publication of Shai Agnon's works in the literary-political monthly journal "Molad" (under the editorship of Ephraim Broido); among other things, there is mention of Agnon's (Hebrew) stories "Me-Hamat HaMetzik" and "Shirat Ha-Otiyot" ("Song of the Letters"), taken from his acclaimed novel "Hakhnassat Kalah" ("The Bridal Canopy"). Agnon also refers to other stories of his in these letters, but does not give their names. In his own inimitable style, Agnon tries to hint that his stories are in no need of being certified by an editor. In another vein, Agnon tries to pressure Broido into publishing his works more expeditiously: "If Molad is to publish ‘Me-Hamat HaMetzik, ' you need to hurry up and see to it that it gets published by Molad in the very near future, lest Mr. [Salman] Schocken beats you to it. " In a brief letter, he recommends the following: " Dear Mr. Broido, if you wish to read a good story, read this story. And if you wish to share the pleasure with our readers, publish it in your Molad. I derived great joy from its charm and quality " (from the context, it is unclear whether Agnon is referring here to one of his own stories, or one by another author). These letters were written mostly when Agnon was in his elderly years. In one of them, he makes an interesting and honest reference to his own advanced age: "My frail eyes and elderly fingers have trouble finding their way […] through the pages of copy editing. Anything you do to ease the burden of proofreading shall be doubly rewarded in the [resulting] quality of the story itself." Other matters addressed in the letters include the standard authors' salary, copy editing and corrections, and references to other authors and critics; among the names mentioned are literary critic Ya'akov Bahat, Dr. Max Mayer (editor of the German-Jewish periodical "Jüdische Rundschau"), Aaron Zeitlin, and Meshulam Tochner.
11 letters (1-3 pp. each; most only a single page in length), size and condition vary. Overall good condition. Stains. Minor creases. Fold lines. Punch holes (some causing minor damage to text). One letter written on postcard.
Provenance: "Molad" Archives.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $150
Sold for: $188
Including buyer's premium
Offprints of two of S.Y. Agnon's tales. Jerusalem, 1927 [and 1934].
1. "BiLevav Yamim" ["In the Heart of the Seas"] (excerpted from "Sefer Bialik, " published by Va'ad HaYovel, 1934). Inscribed by Agnon (in upper left corner) to Shelomo Dov Goitein: "To my honorable friend, RaSha"d [acronym for R. Shelomo Dov] Goitein [letters of name faded]… S.Y. Agnon."
42 pp., approx. 27 cm. Good condition. Blemishes and tears (mostly minor) to edges. 2. "Sipur Ha-Shanim Ha-Tovot" ["Tale of the Good Years"]. Jerusalem: HaMadpis Press, 5687 [1927].
11, [2] pp., 25 cm. Good-fair condition. Open tear to title page (not affecting print). Tears to edges. Stains. Thin paper cover, blemished and stained. This story was first published in 1927 in the Hebrew monthly "Moledet." This booklet is not listed in the NLI catalogue.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $300
Sold for: $425
Including buyer's premium
"With Pushkin's ‘Stone Guest, '" an article handwritten by Leah Goldberg. [ca. 1949]. Hebrew.
A commentary by Leah Goldberg (twelve pages, handwritten, with numerous erasures and corrections), dealing with Alexander Pushkin's "The Stone Guest, " a short poetic dramatization of the legend of Don Juan, part of Pushkin's series known as the "Little Tragedies." The character known in Spanish as Don Juan and in Italian as Don Giovanni – an aristocrat who dedicates his life to seducing women – represented a captivating challenge to many of the great authors and artists of Europe. His story was retold in different versions by, among others, the French playwright Molière, the English poet Lord Byron, and the Austrian composer Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. In the present article, Leah Goldberg attempts to demonstrate the uniqueness and distinctiveness of Pushkin's portrayal of Don Juan: " The first thing that catches the eye when reading ‘The Stone Guest' is that the theme made by Molière into a comedy is converted in Pushkin's work into a tragedy… " Goldberg sketches the two worlds that collide in "Stone Guest, " the world of Don Carlos and Doña Ana, which is serious, heavy, and capable of love, versus the world of Don Juan and Leore, which is lustful, and recklessly subject to all that is fleeting: " This collision between two different worlds […] is not coincidental; it is ever present; it is one of the foundations of life; it is the eternal tempting of fate… it is on account of the struggle between these foundations that ‘Stone Guest' is a tragedy, and the characters – those we had already encountered in a different light – appear here illuminated by a tragic glow, like an old clocktower in the town square just before sundown, with its long shadow by its side ." On pages 6-7 of the article we find Leah Goldberg's translation of various lines from Pushkin's work (with numerous corrections, erased words, and an entire line erased and replaced with a different translation).
First page inscribed (Hebrew): "Molad / Regular." The article was eventually published in Issue no. 15 (June 1949) of the journal "Molad, " under the editorship of Ephraim Broido.
12 ff. (12 written pp.), 22.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Stains, creases, and blemishes (including several ink stains, some causing damage to text). Horizontal fold line. Small tears and holes to edges.
Provenance: "Molad" Archives.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $300
Sold for: $550
Including buyer's premium
"R.M. Rilke, " autograph poem by Leah Goldberg. Hebrew. Signed. Poem in three rhymed and metered verses. (Published in the book "Shibolet Yerukat Ha'Ayin, " 1939, Hebrew). The subject of the poem is the German poet Rainer Maria Rilke (1875-1926). Rilke has been cited by various literary critics as a dominant influence on Leah Goldberg's poetry.
[1] f., 28.5 cm. Good-fair condition. Fold lines and creases. Tears, some open, to edges and to length of fold lines (with minor damage to text). Minor stains.
Provenance: "Molad" Archives.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $200
Sold for: $300
Including buyer's premium
Six letters and postcards handwritten by Leah Goldberg. Paris, Zurich, Klosters (Switzerland), and Copenhagen (one possibly from Israel). 1950s-1960s. Hebrew.
1-4. Four postcards with author Leah Goldberg's brief descriptions of her impressions of European cities, addressed to Ephraim and Gentila Broido. Zurich (1953): "Had I been a poet, I would have written a poem about this time in Zurich, as the lights over the bridges are turned on and the swan floats on the water, and all the church bells are ringing. But… all I'm writing is a postcard." Copenhagen (1960): "Every day at noon, I leave the reading room to smoke a cigarette and detest all the tourists who come here in droves […] other than them there's no one here to hate." Paris (1963): "The rain has ended (for the third time today) and the sun lights up the street – which is plenty ugly – where I'm staying. The French all eat 'a large breakfast' and there's total silence all around." Klosters (Klosters-Serneus, Switzerland, 1950s): "Hello from the rain, from the fog, from the mountains, and from us" (this postcard also signed by the philosopher Nathan Rotenstreich and his wife Dina). 5. Letter from Paris addressed to Ephraim Broido, with a reference to a visit to the theater: "I saw Ionesco's Tableaux [sic], a play I thoroughly enjoyed. It's a return to the circus in the loveliest way. After that there was 'The Maids' by Jean Genet and they yelled like they do in Habima [Theatre in Tel Aviv] and [that] I didn't enjoy very much" (1963). 6. Short letter to the "Molad" editorial board on the subject of the publication of a poem or piece of prose in the journal (place and date not indicated).
Postcards: Approx. 10X15 cm. Letters: [2] and [1] pp., approx. 21 cm. Good condition. Minor blemishes. Few stains and creases. Punch holes to letters and to one postcard (minor damage to writing in one letter). Small handwritten notation in a different hand to two of the postcards.
Enclosed: Copy of letter (typewritten) from Ephraim Broido to Goldberg.
Provenance: "Molad" Archives.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $200
Sold for: $525
Including buyer's premium
Two letters signed by poet Uri Zvi Greenberg, relating to his boyhood friend Daniel Leybl, one sent to Leybl shortly before his death, the other offering condolences to Leybl's daughter following her father's passing. January-February 1967.
1. Letter addressed to Daniel Leybl, handwritten by Uri Zvi Greenberg. January 8, 1967. In this letter, Greenberg sends greetings to Leybl (presumably on the occasion of his 75th birthday) and apologizes that these greetings are handwritten and belated, on account of Greenberg's deep sorrow over the passing of his close friend, Miriam Margolin-Yeivin (1869-1966): " Every two or three days over a period of several weeks I came to Jerusalem to Hadassah [Hospital], as she lay unconscious: She couldn't die! Her heart, ailing throughout her life, from Vilna to Tel Aviv and Jerusalem (that is fifty years!) kept going, and persevered! " The greetings are somewhat pervaded by a mood of melancholy: "Please accept my greetings to you – truly from the bottom of my heart, although it's so very sad that a person grows old, that he can't return to his 'golden age' (which is in fact imaginary) of youth." The letter concludes with a four-line poem. [1] f. folded in half (2 pp.), 21.5X28 cm. Good condition. Fold lines and creases. Minor stains. Minor tears to edges, and minute hole at intersection of fold lines. 2. Letter of condolence to Leybl's daughter, the translator Gentila Leybl Broido (who went by the pen name "G. Aryoh"), typewritten with handwritten corrections. February 23, 1967. " After all, you were not yet born when I first met up with your father in Warsaw, in the youthful days of the Yiddish Renaissance in Galicia and the Ukraine […] and on No. 13 Tlomackie St. [headquarters of the Jewish Union of Authors and Journalists in Warsaw] … the reading of the handwritten copies of your dad's before they were published under the title 'In Grinem Lampen Schein' [Leybl's only published book of poetry; Warsaw, 1922] […] and the writng of his poems in Hebrew, in secret […] We were a generation filled with poetry, and there is nothing of the sort here today … The last of my friends in literary Warsaw! And there's nothing to be done to bring it all back ." [1] f., 27 cm. Good condition. Fold lines and creases. Minor stains. Small holes.
Provenance: "Molad" Archives.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Three poems handwritten by the poet and author Aaron Zeitlin, and some 55 letters exchanged between him and Ephraim Broido. New York, Jerusalem, and Tel Aviv, late 1940s till the 1960s. Hebrew.
• Three handwritten poems (with vocalization, proofreading instructions, and footnotes), each dedicated to a particular personality: Zalman Shazar, President of the State of Israel; "Lehi" fighter and Knesset Member Geula Cohen; and Zeitlin's father, Hillel Zeitlin. All three poems were published in the monthly journal "Molad, " under the editorship of Ephraim Broido. 1. "On Zeitlin Street in Tel Aviv, " a poem dedicated to the poet's father, referring to how the legacy of Hillel Zeitlin is "reborn", so to speak, on the street bearing his name. 2. "In Kfar Chabad, " a poem dedicated to Zalman Shazar, Third President of the State of Israel, who was the scion to a long line of rabbis belonging to the Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic movement. Published in the monthly journal "Molad" (vol. 17, 1959). 3. "All of These, " a poem dedicated to Geula Cohen, member of the "Lehi" underground, and Knesset member. Published in the monthly journal "Molad" (vol. 22, 1964). Each poem is written on a separate sheet, on sheets of different size. Fair-good condition. Fold lines, punch holes, stains, and blemishes. Two sheets with strips of paper glued on, bearing addenda and corrections. • Some 55 letters (most of them handwritten) by Zeitlin, and copies of letters by Ephraim Broido (typewritten with handwritten corrections). The letters mostly refer to the publication of works and articles in the journal "Molad"; some letters containing lines and verses of poetry, with final corrections before publication. There is mention of such names as Sh.Y. (Shmuel Yosef) Agnon, Isaac Bashevis Singer, Shmuel Hugo Bergmann, Nathan Rotenstreich, and other authors, philosophers, and intellectuals. Approx. 55 letters and copies of letters. Size and condition vary.
Provenance: "Molad" Archives.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $200
Sold for: $250
Including buyer's premium
Over one hundred letters exchanged between the literary critic Baruch Kurzweil and Ephraim Broido, editor of the journal "Molad, " and the draft of an article by Kurzweil, with (Broido's?) handwritten corrections. Ramat Gan, Haifa, and additional locations, late 1940s to early 1960s.
• Dozens of original letters from Baruch Kurzweil (handwritten and signed), and dozens of copies of letters from Ephraim Broido (printed, some with handwritten comments and corrections). Many of Kurzweil's letters are written in his characteristically unbridled style, and include harsh words regarding certain literary personalities ("Jerusalem's gang of intellectual thugs diminishes and silences everything"; "You failed to comment on the outrageous banality of Jacob Katz's article ‘Concept and Reality in Jewish Nationalism'"); strident criticism directed at the addressee ("You are a prime example of what is likely to happen to an honest man who lacks a strong character"; "For over a year, ‘Molad' has been turning itself into the unofficial journal for, among other things, a gang of graphomaniacs"); and his contemptuous views on the quality of literary criticism in Israel ("Criticism – nothing of the sort exists here; I'm the one and only critic around").
Broido's letters appear far more restrained, and they often clearly represent attempts on his part to quell Kurzweil's anger, while expressing, at the same time, his unqualified admiration for the writer ("The job of the editor is to save the author from – among other things – himself"; "The image of Kurzweil in our literary scene would surely benefit… if only your articles there would forgo that ‘personal' tone that blemishes the precious metal in some of them").
Other subjects dealt with in the letters include matters relating to various Hebrew authors (such as Yitzhak Lamdan, S. Izhar, Shaul Tchernichovsky, and others); Kurzweil's ideas being plagiarized by various literary scholars (one of the letters has an attachment in which Kurzweil meticulously compares his own article with a later one by some other author); financial affairs; and other matters. • Draft copy of the article titled "The Faustian Problem and its Influence on the European Spirit, " by Baruch Kurzweil (14 pages, typewritten; with handwritten notes, corrections, and instructions for the printer – presumably by Broido).
Size and condition vary. Overall good condition.
Enclosed: Sixteen pages from the (Hebrew) article "Self-Hatred in the Literature of the Jews" by Baruch Kurzweil, typewritten, with handwritten comments (presumably missing several pages).
Provenance: "Molad" Archives.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $300
Sold for: $525
Including buyer's premium
Eight autograph letters by Martin (Mordechai) Buber and articles by him, with his handwritten corrections. Sent to Ephraim Broido, editor of the literary journal Molad. Jerusalem, ca. 1949-1965. 1-2. Typescript drafts of the articles "Two Meetings" and "Religion and Ethics" (Hebrew; translated from the German by Zevi Woyslawski). Each of the drafts is hand-signed by Martin Buber at the beginning of the article, with many erasures and corrections, some by Buber and some in a different hand, presumably by Ephraim Broido (both articles were published in "Molad", the journal edited by Broido, issues no. 143 [1960] and 212 [1967]). Two Meetings: [5] ff.; Religion and Ethics: 14 ff. Approx. 28 cm. Good-fair condition. Horizontal fold lines. Stains and minor creases. Closed and opens tears (mostly small). 3-10. Eight autograph letters, signed by Martin Buber . Sent to Ephraim Broido and dealing with the publishing of various articles by Buber in "Molad" and the proofreading and translation of complex concepts into Hebrew (enclosed with six of the letters are copies of response letters by Broido). 1949-1950. Eight letters, each [1] f., size varies. Good condition. Filing holes. Some stains and blemishes. One letter is stapled to the copy of the response letter.
Enclosed: • Four copies of other letters by Broido to Buber, from the years 1958-1961 (including a letter of greeting for Buber's birthday and an invitation to take part in a scholarly anthology for the 10th anniversary of the State of Israel, presented to Prime Minister David Ben Gurion). • "Drei Briefe Bubers an Bergman" [Three letters by Buber to Bergman], draft of a special publication for the second anniversary of Martin Buber's passing – three letters sent by Buber to Hugo Bergman in 1918, with a foreword by Bergman (mimeographed typescript; incomplete – one letter is missing). German.
Provenance: "Molad" Archives.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue
Auction 84 - Jewish and Israeli History, Culture and Art
December 21, 2021
Opening: $500
Sold for: $1,250
Including buyer's premium
Fifteen letters sent by the philosopher, Sir Isaiah Berlin, to Ephraim Broido. Oxford, Genoa, Zurich, and Rehovot, 1950s-1980s (mostly 1960s-1970s). English (one letter in Hebrew).
Three letters handwritten; the remainder, mostly on official stationery, typewritten (some with handwritten corrections and/or addenda). All but one signed by Isaiah Berlin. Most of the letters deal with the subject of rescuing "Molad, " the journal founded and edited by Ephraim Broido, from threats of closure. They contain Berlin's instructions and words of advice and encouragement to Broido, written over a period of many years. Among other things, Berlin suggests that Broido approach potential financial sponsors in a particular style or with a particular type of argument; he recommends approaching specific people of influence (such as Hebrew University President Eliahu Eilat, Chairman of the Jewish Agency Pinchas Sapir, the diplomat Yaakov Herzog, and the philanthropist Sir Isaac Wolfson); and he provides Broido with updates regarding the status of various requests. In a letter from 1969 (whose contents Berlin requests remain confidential), Berlin informs Broido of an upcoming grant of 12,000$ obtained for Molad's benefit. Additional subjects addressed in the letters concern translations of Berlin's writings appearing in Molad, and the delivery of books, money, and other things.
Sir Isaiah Berlin (1909-1997), philosopher, political theorist, and historian of ideas, among the most influential of 20th-century academics in the field of liberal thought. Active most of his life at Oxford University. Served as President of the British Academy. His work "Two Concepts of Liberty" is still regarded as one of the 20th century's most consequential philosophical discussions.
15 letters. Size and condition vary. Overall good-fair condition. Punch holes. Fold lines. Some creases and stains. Tears (mostly minor) to edges.
Provenance: "Molad" Archives.
Category
Autographs
Catalogue