This collection of Meissen porcelain could break records at auction
Sotheby's will soon auction off a prestigious collection of Meissen porcelain, once owned by the collectors Franz and Margarethe Oppenheimer
The Oppenheimer porcelain pieces will go under the hammer on September 14 at Sotheby's New York.
Image: Courtesy Sotheby's
An auction lot like this hasn't been seen on the market in the last four decades. Sotheby's will soon auction off a prestigious collection of Meissen porcelain, once owned by the collectors Franz and Margarethe Oppenheimer. The estimate for the collection? Several million dollars.
According to Sotheby's, "one doesn't expect to find such masterpieces for sale in the 21st century." And for good reason: the porcelain collection offered for sale on September 14 is as rare as it is coveted. It was assembled by Berlin collectors Franz and Margarethe Oppenheimer in the late 1920s, when it was possible to acquire certain pieces from the royal collections in Dresden.
The vases, cups, teapots, bowls and other objects that make up the Oppenheimers' porcelain collection attest to this expertise. "In every collection, there are obvious stars, and the Oppenheimer's is no exception," gallerist Michele Beiny told Bloomberg. "It's one of the great collections to come [to market]—certainly in living memory, or at least in postwar memory."
An extraordinary history
Among the most coveted lots are a rare tea and coffee set made for the Morosini family of Venice, estimated at $120,000 to $180,000; and a mantelpiece clock estimated at $200,000 to $400,000. Some pieces are also accessible to less wealthy collectors, such as a tea bowl and saucer dating from 1725 to 1730 (estimated at $2,000 to $3,000), or a small Imari porcelain teapot (estimated at $3,000 to $5,000).
However, bidding could go higher because of the unusual history of the Oppenheimer porcelain collection. After the Nazis came to power in Berlin, the couple fled to Vienna. They remained there until the annexation of Austria by Nazi Germany, when they moved to New York. While they were able to take some of their collection to the Austrian capital, the exact details of how and when the Oppenheimers parted with their porcelain objects are unclear. The vast majority of them were purchased by the German Jewish banker Fritz Mannheimer, before ending up in the possession of the Nazis upon his death in 1939.
They were sent to the Netherlands at the end of World War II, and some pieces were later transferred to the Rijksmuseum. The Dutch authorities returned them to the Oppenheimer heirs in 2019, following a lengthy restitution process. They will go under the hammer on September 14 in New York, at a major dedicated auction.
Last Updated :
September 14, 21 05:22:11 PM IST