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Hans Knesl Sold at Auction Prices

Sculptor, Caricaturist, Painter

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      • HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)
        Nov. 28, 2024

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)

        Est: €600 - €1,200

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna) Mourning woman, 1948 bronze 8,5 x 7,5 x 5 cm signed Knesl, dated 1948 numbered 4/7 SCHÄTZPREIS / ESTIMATE °€ 600 - 1200 STARTPREIS / STARTING PRICE °€ 600 The Austrian Artist Hans Knesl grew up in simple circumstances in Bad Pirawarth near Vienna. After his mother's early death, he lived mostly in his own thoughts. His father found him an apprenticeship in Lage (Lippe), where Hans Knesl received training as a stonemason from 1920 to 1924. He then studied sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna under Hans Bitterlich and graduated with a diploma in 1930. Knesl remained in Vienna as a freelance artist. Due to a lack of larger orders, he initially made portraits, illustrated magazines (Wiener Magazin 1940 to 1941) and designed models for the Metzler & Ortloff porcelain factory in Ilmenau, Thuringia. There he met Elfriede Dietz, whom he married in 1936. With the annexation, Hans Knesl's professional situation deteriorated further because his style did not correspond to the ideas of the Nazis and his work was classified as “degenerate”. Knesl was drafted in 1941, but was released shortly before the end of the war for health reasons. After the war, Knesl earned his living by doing restoration work on the Vienna City Hall, the University of Vienna and Laxenburg Palace. He also devoted himself to sculpture again. In 1949 he became a member of the Vienna Künstlerhaus. In 1951 he became head of the master class for sculpture at the Academy of Applied Arts. Based on the teaching of technical skills, its aim was to support the students in their independent artistic development. Knesl used summer stays in the Waldviertel to work with Mühldorf marble. Knesl's “Big Standing One”, exhibited in Vienna's City Park in 1954, caused a scandal and had to be removed; his “Standing Girl” was badly damaged in 1956. In the last years of his life, Knesl turned to drawing and painting. His work was subsequently brought to a wider public through two major exhibitions in Vienna. For the last one, in 1970, he created nine new sculptures in less than a year. Knesl's works created in the 1940s and 1950s are now considered classics of the archaizing, de-individualizing tendencies of figurative art. His plastic realism of the 1960s played a key role in establishing new, realistic movements. His artistic problems were primarily based on the human figure, which was schematized differently in the different phases of artistic development. Knesl remained attached to the idealized figure for a long time before he found a more realistic form around 1950. In the 1950s, figures with strong sculptural accents were created, which soon gave way to sculptures with a stronger tectonic structure. In the 1960s, both design directions achieved a synthesis in his “Standing” and “Striding” works. Knesl always chose hard stones for his works, with drawings that were as quiet as possible so that the viewer's eye was not distracted from the shape. When Hans Knesl worked as a sculptor, his figures grew by adding small particles of mass in several layers, like an onion. He left the texture of the applied clay lumps visible. Almost all of Hans Knesl's sculptures are cast in concrete, initially for cost reasons. PLEASE NOTE: The purchase price consists of the highest bid plus the buyer's premium, sales tax and, if applicable, the fee of artists resale rights. In the case of normal taxation (marked ° at the estimate), a premium of 24% is added to the highest bid. The mandatory sales tax is added to the sum of the highest bid and the buyer's premium. This amounts to 13% for paintings, drawings, graphic works and sculptures and 20% for photographs and all other items. The buyer's premium amounts to 28% in case of differential taxation. The sales tax is included in the differential taxation.

        Widder Auctions
      • HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)
        Nov. 28, 2024

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)

        Est: €400 - €800

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna) Nude bronze 19 x 8 x 6 cm signed Knesl numbered IX 3/7 SCHÄTZPREIS / ESTIMATE °€ 400 - 800 STARTPREIS / STARTING PRICE °€ 400 The Austrian Artist Hans Knesl grew up in simple circumstances in Bad Pirawarth near Vienna. After his mother's early death, he lived mostly in his own thoughts. His father found him an apprenticeship in Lage (Lippe), where Hans Knesl received training as a stonemason from 1920 to 1924. He then studied sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna under Hans Bitterlich and graduated with a diploma in 1930. Knesl remained in Vienna as a freelance artist. Due to a lack of larger orders, he initially made portraits, illustrated magazines (Wiener Magazin 1940 to 1941) and designed models for the Metzler & Ortloff porcelain factory in Ilmenau, Thuringia. There he met Elfriede Dietz, whom he married in 1936. With the annexation, Hans Knesl's professional situation deteriorated further because his style did not correspond to the ideas of the Nazis and his work was classified as “degenerate”. Knesl was drafted in 1941, but was released shortly before the end of the war for health reasons. After the war, Knesl earned his living by doing restoration work on the Vienna City Hall, the University of Vienna and Laxenburg Palace. He also devoted himself to sculpture again. In 1949 he became a member of the Vienna Künstlerhaus. In 1951 he became head of the master class for sculpture at the Academy of Applied Arts. Based on the teaching of technical skills, its aim was to support the students in their independent artistic development. Knesl used summer stays in the Waldviertel to work with Mühldorf marble. Knesl's “Big Standing One”, exhibited in Vienna's City Park in 1954, caused a scandal and had to be removed; his “Standing Girl” was badly damaged in 1956. In the last years of his life, Knesl turned to drawing and painting. His work was subsequently brought to a wider public through two major exhibitions in Vienna. For the last one, in 1970, he created nine new sculptures in less than a year. Knesl's works created in the 1940s and 1950s are now considered classics of the archaizing, de-individualizing tendencies of figurative art. His plastic realism of the 1960s played a key role in establishing new, realistic movements. His artistic problems were primarily based on the human figure, which was schematized differently in the different phases of artistic development. Knesl remained attached to the idealized figure for a long time before he found a more realistic form around 1950. In the 1950s, figures with strong sculptural accents were created, which soon gave way to sculptures with a stronger tectonic structure. In the 1960s, both design directions achieved a synthesis in his “Standing” and “Striding” works. Knesl always chose hard stones for his works, with drawings that were as quiet as possible so that the viewer's eye was not distracted from the shape. When Hans Knesl worked as a sculptor, his figures grew by adding small particles of mass in several layers, like an onion. He left the texture of the applied clay lumps visible. Almost all of Hans Knesl's sculptures are cast in concrete, initially for cost reasons. PLEASE NOTE: The purchase price consists of the highest bid plus the buyer's premium, sales tax and, if applicable, the fee of artists resale rights. In the case of normal taxation (marked ° at the estimate), a premium of 24% is added to the highest bid. The mandatory sales tax is added to the sum of the highest bid and the buyer's premium. This amounts to 13% for paintings, drawings, graphic works and sculptures and 20% for photographs and all other items. The buyer's premium amounts to 28% in case of differential taxation. The sales tax is included in the differential taxation.

        Widder Auctions
      • HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)
        Nov. 28, 2024

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)

        Est: €1,000 - €2,000

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna) Penguin, 1969 bronze 18,5 x 10 x 9 cm dated 1969 numbered 3/7 SCHÄTZPREIS / ESTIMATE °€ 1000 - 2000 STARTPREIS / STARTING PRICE °€ 1000 The Austrian Artist Hans Knesl grew up in simple circumstances in Bad Pirawarth near Vienna. After his mother's early death, he lived mostly in his own thoughts. His father found him an apprenticeship in Lage (Lippe), where Hans Knesl received training as a stonemason from 1920 to 1924. He then studied sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna under Hans Bitterlich and graduated with a diploma in 1930. Knesl remained in Vienna as a freelance artist. Due to a lack of larger orders, he initially made portraits, illustrated magazines (Wiener Magazin 1940 to 1941) and designed models for the Metzler & Ortloff porcelain factory in Ilmenau, Thuringia. There he met Elfriede Dietz, whom he married in 1936. With the annexation, Hans Knesl's professional situation deteriorated further because his style did not correspond to the ideas of the Nazis and his work was classified as “degenerate”. Knesl was drafted in 1941, but was released shortly before the end of the war for health reasons. After the war, Knesl earned his living by doing restoration work on the Vienna City Hall, the University of Vienna and Laxenburg Palace. He also devoted himself to sculpture again. In 1949 he became a member of the Vienna Künstlerhaus. In 1951 he became head of the master class for sculpture at the Academy of Applied Arts. Based on the teaching of technical skills, its aim was to support the students in their independent artistic development. Knesl used summer stays in the Waldviertel to work with Mühldorf marble. Knesl's “Big Standing One”, exhibited in Vienna's City Park in 1954, caused a scandal and had to be removed; his “Standing Girl” was badly damaged in 1956. In the last years of his life, Knesl turned to drawing and painting. His work was subsequently brought to a wider public through two major exhibitions in Vienna. For the last one, in 1970, he created nine new sculptures in less than a year. Knesl's works created in the 1940s and 1950s are now considered classics of the archaizing, de-individualizing tendencies of figurative art. His plastic realism of the 1960s played a key role in establishing new, realistic movements. His artistic problems were primarily based on the human figure, which was schematized differently in the different phases of artistic development. Knesl remained attached to the idealized figure for a long time before he found a more realistic form around 1950. In the 1950s, figures with strong sculptural accents were created, which soon gave way to sculptures with a stronger tectonic structure. In the 1960s, both design directions achieved a synthesis in his “Standing” and “Striding” works. Knesl always chose hard stones for his works, with drawings that were as quiet as possible so that the viewer's eye was not distracted from the shape. When Hans Knesl worked as a sculptor, his figures grew by adding small particles of mass in several layers, like an onion. He left the texture of the applied clay lumps visible. Almost all of Hans Knesl's sculptures are cast in concrete, initially for cost reasons. PLEASE NOTE: The purchase price consists of the highest bid plus the buyer's premium, sales tax and, if applicable, the fee of artists resale rights. In the case of normal taxation (marked ° at the estimate), a premium of 24% is added to the highest bid. The mandatory sales tax is added to the sum of the highest bid and the buyer's premium. This amounts to 13% for paintings, drawings, graphic works and sculptures and 20% for photographs and all other items. The buyer's premium amounts to 28% in case of differential taxation. The sales tax is included in the differential taxation.

        Widder Auctions
      • HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)
        May. 28, 2024

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)

        Est: €300 - €600

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna) Portfolio of 6 lithographs, 1970 lithographs/paper, each 50,5 x 35,5 cm and numbered 10 Meadow with dandelions, Female nude, Sitting female nude, Houses, Portrait with nude, sitting female nudes ESTIMATE °€ 300 - 600 STARTING PRICE °€ 300 Hans Knesl grew up in simple circumstances in Bad Pirawarth near Vienna. After his mother's early death, he lived mostly in his own thoughts. His father found him an apprenticeship in Lage (Lippe), where Hans Knesl received training as a stonemason from 1920 to 1924. He then studied sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts in Vienna under Hans Bitterlich and graduated with a diploma in 1930. Knesl remained in Vienna as a freelance artist. Due to a lack of larger orders, he initially made portraits, illustrated magazines (Wiener Magazin 1940 to 1941) and designed models for the Metzler & Ortloff porcelain factory in Ilmenau, Thuringia. There he met Elfriede Dietz, whom he married in 1936. With the annexation, Hans Knesl's professional situation deteriorated further because his style did not correspond to the ideas of the Nazis and his work was classified as “degenerate”. Knesl was drafted in 1941, but was released shortly before the end of the war for health reasons. After the war, Knesl earned his living by doing restoration work on the Vienna City Hall, the University of Vienna and Laxenburg Palace. He also devoted himself to sculpture again. In 1949 he became a member of the Vienna Künstlerhaus. In 1951 he became head of the master class for sculpture at the Academy of Applied Arts. Based on the teaching of technical skills, its aim was to support the students in their independent artistic development. Knesl used summer stays in the Waldviertel to work with Mühldorf marble. Knesl's “Big Standing One”, exhibited in Vienna's City Park in 1954, caused a scandal and had to be removed; his “Standing Girl” was badly damaged in 1956. In the last years of his life, Knesl turned to drawing and painting. His work was subsequently brought to a wider public through two major exhibitions in Vienna. For the last one, in 1970, he created nine new sculptures in less than a year. Knesl's works created in the 1940s and 1950s are now considered classics of the archaizing, de-individualizing tendencies of figurative art. His plastic realism of the 1960s played a key role in establishing new, realistic movements. His artistic problems were primarily based on the human figure, which was schematized differently in the different phases of artistic development. Knesl remained attached to the idealized figure for a long time before he found a more realistic form around 1950. In the 1950s, figures with strong sculptural accents were created, which soon gave way to sculptures with a stronger tectonic structure. In the 1960s, both design directions achieved a synthesis in his “Standing” and “Striding” works. Knesl always chose hard stones for his works, with drawings that were as quiet as possible so that the viewer's eye was not distracted from the shape. When Hans Knesl worked as a sculptor, his figures grew by adding small particles of mass in several layers, like an onion. He left the texture of the applied clay lumps visible. Almost all of Hans Knesl's sculptures are cast in concrete, initially for cost reasons. PLEASE NOTE: The purchase price consists of the highest bid plus the buyer's premium, sales tax and, if applicable, the fee of artists resale rights. In the case of normal taxation (marked °), a premium of 24% is added to the highest bid. The mandatory sales tax of 13%, for photographs 20%, is added to the sum of the highest bid and the buyer's premium. The buyer's premium amounts to 28% in case of differential taxation. The sales tax is included in the differential taxation.

        Widder Auctions
      • HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)
        Nov. 23, 2023

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)

        Est: €1,000 - €2,000

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna) Hand stand bronze, 55 x 13 x 11 cm signed Knesl ESTIMATE € 1000 - 2000 STARTING PRICE € 1000 Austrian sculptor of the 20th century, representative of modernism after 1950. Already as a teenager interested in carving and sculptural representation. 1920 to 1924 training as a stonemason in Lage in Germany. Then studied sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts with Hans Bitterlich. Created portraits and models for the porcelain factory Metzler & Ortloff in Thuringia. During the Nazi era, his works were classified as degenerate art. From 1951 professor for sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts. Stays in the Waldviertel during the summer months, working with Mühldorfer marble. Development towards modern sculpture under the influence of Cubism. Sculptures made of marble, stone, concrete and bronze. Development of an idealized figure type in the direction of a plastic form. Classics of modern sculpture, forerunners of new realistic trends around Alfred Hrdlicka. 1986 Founding of the sculpture park in Bad Pirawarth in honor of the artist. PLEASE NOTE: The purchase price consists of the highest bid plus the buyer's premium, sales tax and, if applicable, the fee of artists resale rights. In the case of normal taxation (marked °), a premium of 24% is added to the highest bid. The mandatory sales tax of 13%, for photographys 20%, is added to the sum of the highest bid and the buyer's premium. The buyer's premium amounts to 28% in case of differential taxation. The sales tax is included in the differential taxation.

        Widder Auctions
      • Knesl, Hans (1905 Bad Pirawarth - Wien 1971)
        Mar. 23, 2023

        Knesl, Hans (1905 Bad Pirawarth - Wien 1971)

        Est: €100 - €120

        Elegante Dame des Art Deco mit Hund. Porzellan. Bunt bemalt. Rundsockel mit geprägter Sign. Rote Stempelmarke Metzler & Ortloff, Ilmenau/Thüringen, vor 1975. H. 18,5 cm.

        Dannenberg
      • Scene in the Suburbs
        Jun. 09, 2022

        Scene in the Suburbs

        Est: €800 - €1,000

        Scene in the Suburbs Ink and Watercolor on Paper Signed lower right Passepartout Outcut unopened: 16,9 x 11,8 in framed

        Lehner Kunstauktionen
      • HANS KNESL (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)
        May. 19, 2022

        HANS KNESL (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna)

        Est: €1,000 - €2,000

        HANS KNESL* (Bad Pirawarth 1905 - 1971 Vienna) Striding woman, 1955 bronze, 52 x 24 x 15 cm signed Knesel and dated 1955 Provenance: collection Gusel Austria, private property Vienna ESTIMATE °€ 1.000 - 2.000 Austrian sculptor of the 20th century, representative of modernism after 1950. Already as a teenager interested in carving and sculptural representation. 1920 to 1924 training as a stonemason in Lage in Germany. Then studied sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts with Hans Bitterlich. Created portraits and models for the porcelain factory Metzler & Ortloff in Thuringia. During the Nazi era, his works were classified as degenerate art. From 1951 professor for sculpture at the Academy of Fine Arts. Stays in the Waldviertel during the summer months, working with Mühldorfer marble. Development towards modern sculpture under the influence of Cubism. Sculptures made of marble, stone, concrete and bronze. Development of an idealized figure type in the direction of a plastic form. Classics of modern sculpture, forerunners of new realistic trends around Alfred Hrdlicka. 1986 Founding of the sculpture park in Bad Pirawarth in honor of the artist. PLEASE NOTE: The purchase price consists of the highest bid plus the buyer's premium, sales tax and, if applicable, the fee of artists resale rights. In the case of normal taxation (marked ° in the catalog), a premium of 24% is added to the highest bid. The mandatory sales tax of 13% is added to the sum of the highest bid and the buyer's premium. The buyer's premium amounts to 28% in case of differential taxation. The sales tax is included in the differential taxation.

        Widder Auctions
      • Metzler & Ortloff Ilmenau Mephisto
        May. 29, 2020

        Metzler & Ortloff Ilmenau Mephisto

        Est: -

        Metzler & Ortloff Ilmenau Mephisto Entwurf Hans Knesl (1905-1971), grüne Stempelmarke mit Zusatz Kunstporzellane 1910-1935, geprägte Modellnummer 6007 sowie Künstlersignatur, leicht abstrahierte Ausformung in Weißporzellan, auf Ovalsockel Mephisto mit wallendem Umhang und einem nackten Mädchen in dynamischer Tanzpose, ein Horn fachmännisch restauriert, H 21 cm. [Clocks&Watches] [Jewellery] [Furniture] [ArtNouveau]

        Auktionshaus Mehlis GmbH
      • METZLER & ORTLOFF KUNSTPORZELLAN-FIGUR ¨STEHENDE MARIA¨
        Feb. 22, 2020

        METZLER & ORTLOFF KUNSTPORZELLAN-FIGUR ¨STEHENDE MARIA¨

        Est: -

        Entwurf HANS KNESL (1905-1971), Ausführung in Bisquitporzellan, Rundstand, darauf bezeichnet ¨Knesl, Wien¨, am Boden Manufakturmarke, H 35cm, am Stand 1x (Unterseite) leicht gechipt

        Auktionshaus Rotherbaum OHG
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