Josef Capek (1887-1945)
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Josef Capek (1887-1945)

A collection of seven linocuts

细节
Josef Capek (1887-1945)
A collection of seven linocuts
including: Kosile (Shirt), 1916, on wove paper, initialled in pencil, counter-initialled verso (trimmed), with margins; Podoba za Biografu (Face from Cinema), 1917-18, initialled in pencil, with margins; Harmonikàr (Harmonica Player), 1919, signed in pencil, counter-initialled verso (trimmed), with margins; Herec (Actor), 1920, initialled in pencil, counter-initialled and numbered 120/25 verso, with margins; Námorník II (Sailor II), 1916-1918, signed in pencil, with margins, moisture stain in the lower margin; Papera zasazen láskou (Weakling struck by Love) (illustrated), 1919, signed in pencil, counter-initialled and numbered (trimmed) verso, with margins; Autoportret (Self-portrait), 1918, signed in pencil, with margins; all on stiff cream wove paper, with time and backboard staining, the sheets slightly irregularly trimmed, each framed
L. 210 x 120 mm., S. 254 x 154 mm. (and similar) (7)
注意事项
Artist's Resale Right ("Droit de Suite"). Artist's Resale Right Regulations 2006 apply to this lot, the buyer agrees to pay us an amount equal to the resale royalty provided for in those Regulations, and we undertake to the buyer to pay such amount to the artist's collection agent.

拍品专文

The painter, printmaker, caricaturist, poet and writer Josef Capek (1877-1945) was one of the pre-eminent Czech artists of his time, working in a Cubist and later Expressionist style of his own, influenced by the French and German avant-garde as much as by the folk art of his country. As a tireless and courageous opponent of National Socialism, his writings and caricatures proved tragically prophetic. Only two months after Hitler had come to power, Capek under the sarcastic title DEUTSCHLAND ERWACHE! ('Wake up, Germany!') published the image of a shining swastika, rising above an endless field of graves. As a foreign enemy of the state, Josef Capek was interned and died on 12 April 1945 in the concentration camp of Bergen-Belsen of typhus - three days before the liberation of the camp.

Capek's preferred printmaking technique in the years between 1915 -1920 was the linocut, and although some of his prints were published in various art magazines, both in Czechoslovakia and in Germany, they are now extremely hard to find. It is hence very rare for an entire group of impressions, such as the present one, to come to the market.

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