Asta: 600 / Evening Sale del 05 dicembre 2025 a Monaco di Baviera button next Lot 27


27
Karin Kneffel
Ohne Titel, 2016.
Olio su tela
Stima: € 120,000 / $ 139,200
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Karin Kneffel
1957

Ohne Titel. 2016.
Oil on canvas.
Signed, dated, and inscribed “2016/13” on the reverse of the canvas. Inscribed with the dimensions on the stretcher. 180 x 180 cm (70.8 x 70.8 in).

• Striking illusion in a captivating photo-realistic precision.
• Contemporary meets Modern Art: Kneffel depicts Haus Lange in Krefeld, once the home to works by E. L. Kirchner, Lesser Ury, and Wilhelm Lehmbruck, as a memorial site between past and present.
• Virtuoso trompe-l'œil technique using water droplets and light reflections.
• Shown in the exhibition “Karin Kneffel. New Works” at the Gagosian Gallery in the year of its creation.
• Kneffel's paintings are in important collections, including the Pinakothek der Moderne, Munich, the Museum Frieder Burda, Baden-Baden, and the Olbricht Collection, Berlin
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Listed on the artist's official website. We are grateful to Prof. Karin Kneffel for her kind support in cataloging this lot.

PROVENANCE: Gagosian, New York.
Private collection, South Korea (acquired from the above in 2016).

EXHIBITION: Karin Kneffel. New Works, Gagosian, Beverly Hills, April 28–June 11, 2016 (with the gallery label on the stretcher).
Karin Kneffel. Come In, Look Out, Museum Küppersmühle, Duisburg, May 24–September 1, 2024.

Called up: December 5, 2025 - ca. 17.52 h +/- 20 min.

Born in Marl in 1957, Kneffel represents a generation of artists trained in the conceptual rigor associated with German postwar art. As a master student of Gerhard Richter at the Düsseldorf Art Academy, she developed a practice that combines realism with reflection, both literally and metaphorically. Her painstakingly composed, photo-realistic paintings explore perception, transience, and the fragility of representation. Whether hyperrealistic depictions of glossy fruit or interiors behind misted window panes, Kneffel stages a subtle dialog between surface and depth, presence and absence, truth and illusion.

Contemporary meets Modern Art
In “Untitled” (2016), Karin Kneffel transforms the minimalist calm of Ludwig Mies van der Rohe’s Haus Lange into a shimmering field of historical and artistic reflection. Using archive photographs of the once private home of silk manufacturer and art collector Hermann Lange, which were taken around 1930, Kneffel reconstructs the living spaces that were adorned with masterpieces of Modern Art. Three of these works—Ernst Ludwig Kirchner's “Frauen am Potsdamer Platz” (1914), Lesser Ury's “Leipziger Straße” and “Berliner Straße bei Nacht” (both 1889), and Wilhelm Lehmbruck's “Große Sinnende” (1913)—reemerge as luminous beacons, embedded in a historically anchored yet reimagined context.

Illustration  for: Berliner Bild-Bericht, 1930, House Lange, residential hall. © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2025

Berliner Bild-Bericht, 1930, House Lange, residential hall. © VG Bild-Kunst, Bonn 2025


Folded Time
The canvas of the painting “Untitled” offered here reveals not a mere reconstruction, but a meditation on how art and its meanings travel through time. Kneffel’s technique of applying up to four layers of oil paint creates a mysterious depth effect, as if the viewer were looking through a steamed-up glass pane, that is superimposed with graffiti-like, illusionistic finger drawings reminiscent of both condensation and memory fragments. Only the referenced artworks remain untouched, as if cut out of the past and mounted in the present. They exude an immediacy that contrasts with the blurred architecture—a painterly act that simultaneously recalls and relocates. Lehmbruck's “Große Sinnende” (Great Contemplator), however, seems to waft away metaphorically as it takes on the translucent hues of the walls and the scene's dampness.
Kneffel's scene invites us to look beyond the window into a world that once was. Through her art-historical examination of time and the boundaries between documentation and invention, she blends fact and fiction. The glass surface becomes a symbol of mediated perception—we see, but always through a stratum of distance. [KA]




Commissione, tassa e diritti di seguito
Quest'oggetto viene offerto con regime fiscale normale.

Calcolo regime fiscale normale:
Prezzo di aggiudicazione fino a 1.000.000 €: supplemento del 29%. Prezzo di aggiudicazione superiore a 1.000.000 €: Parte del prezzo fino a 1.000.000 € supplemento del 29 %, parte del prezzo che supera i 1.000.000 € supplemento del 23%.
Prezzo di aggiudicazione superiore a 4.000.000 €: Parte del prezzo che supera i 4.000.000 € supplemento del 15%.
L'IVA prevista dalla legge è pari al 7 % sulla somma del prezzo di aggiudicazione e del supplemento.

Calcolo diritti di seguito:
Per le opere originali di arti figurative e fotografie di artisti viventi o deceduti da meno di 70 anni soggette al diritto di seguito, in tutti i casi suddetti viene riscossa in aggiunta, a liquidazione della compensazione del diritto di seguito dovuto dalla casa d'aste ai sensi del § 26 della legge tedesca sul diritto d'autore (Urheberrechtsgesetz, UrhG), una compensazione del diritto di seguito con le percentuali indicate nel § 26 2° comma UrhG, che attualmente sono le seguenti:
4 per cento della parte del ricavo della vendita da 400,00 euro a 50.000 euro,
un altro 3 per cento della parte del ricavo della vendita da 50.000,01 a 200.000 Euro,
un altro 1 per cento della parte del ricavo della vendita da 200.000,01 a 350.000 Euro,
un altro 0,5 per cento della parte del ricavo della vendita da 350.000,01 a 500.000 euro e
un altro 0,25 per cento della parte del ricavo della vendita superiore a 500.000 euro.
L’importo complessivo della compensazione del diritto di seguito derivante da una rivendita è pari al massimo a 12.500 euro.