Hitler’s painting to go under the hammer

Published November 19, 2014
Nuremberg: A watercolour of the old registry office in Munich by German dictator Adolf Hitler lies next to a catalogue of his paintings and drawings at an auction house on Tuesday.—Reuters
Nuremberg: A watercolour of the old registry office in Munich by German dictator Adolf Hitler lies next to a catalogue of his paintings and drawings at an auction house on Tuesday.—Reuters

NUREMBERG: A 1914 watercolour by Adolf Hitler to be auctioned on Saturday could fetch over $62,000 given strong global interest, according to a German auction house chief.

Auctioneer Kathrin Weidler said the painting entitled “Standesamt und Altes Rathaus Muenchen” (Civil Registry Office and Old Town Hall of Munich) is one of about 2,000 works Hitler painted from about 1905 to 1920 as a struggling young artist.

Asked about criticism that it is tasteless to auction Hitler’s works, generally considered to be of limited artistic merit, she said complaints should be addressed to the sellers - an unidentified pair of German sisters in their 70s.

“Those who want to get worked up about this should just go ahead and get worked up about it,” Weidler said at her Weidler Auction House in Nuremberg, where Hitler held mass Nazi party rallies from 1933 to 1938.

“They should take it up with the city of Nuremberg or with those who preserved it. It’s a historical document.”

Hitler wrote in his autobiography, “Mein Kampf”, that his hopes as a young man of becoming an artist were dashed by his repeated rejection by Vienna’s Academy of Fine Arts.

“We’ve had inquiries so far from four continents and the interest in this particular painting appears to be quite high,” Weidler said.

“The interest has been high from America, Japan and across Asia. I don’t know if all these bidders will actually come to the showroom in person. It’s possible but the last time we had a painting from this artist, that didn’t happen.”

Five other Hitler paintings previously auctioned fetched as much as $100,000 while others went for just 6,000.

Weidler said the original handwritten bill dated Sept 25, 1916, came with the painting and was a rarity for Hitler’s art.

Published in Dawn, November 19th, 2014

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