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Otto Pankok Sold at Auction Prices

Painter, Sculptor, b. 1893 - d. 1966

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  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed
    Jan. 25, 2025

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Hand signed in pencil Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Sgned
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Sgned

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph

    Est: €100 - €200

    Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed
    Dec. 28, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Hand signed Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • OTTO PANKOK - MÄDCHENKOPF
    Dec. 14, 2024

    OTTO PANKOK - MÄDCHENKOPF

    Est: €2,000 - €4,000

    OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel GIRL'S HEAD Bronze, dark brown patinated. H. 14,5 cm, weight 2,9 kg. Monogrammed and with foundry stamp 'Schmäke Düsseldorf'. Part. minimally rubbed. Provenance: Düsseldorf private collection. OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel MÄDCHENKOPF Bronze, dunkelbraun patiniert. H. 14,5 cm, Gew. 2,9 cm. Rückseitig monogrammiert und mit Gießereistempel 'Schmäke Düsseldorf'. Part. min. ber. Provenienz: Düsseldorfer Privatsammlung.

    Hargesheimer Kunstauktionen Düsseldorf
  • OTTO PANKOK - 'MARABU II'
    Dec. 14, 2024

    OTTO PANKOK - 'MARABU II'

    Est: €150 - €300

    OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'MARABU II' Woodcut on vellum. Visible size 41,5 x 28 cm. (f. 59 x 44 cm). Signed in pencil lower left. Verso: inscribed with adhesive label. Wavy, part. min. stained. Mounted and framed behind glass (unopened). OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'MARABU II' Holzschnitt auf Velin. SM 41,5 x 28 cm. (R. 59 x 44 cm). Unten links mit Bleistift signiert. Verso: Mit Klebeetikett bez. Blatt gewellt, part. min. fleckig. Im Passepartout und hinter Glas gerahmt (ungeöffnet).

    Hargesheimer Kunstauktionen Düsseldorf
  • OTTO PANKOK - 'ZIEGE' (1947)
    Dec. 14, 2024

    OTTO PANKOK - 'ZIEGE' (1947)

    Est: €150 - €300

    OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'ZIEGE' (1947) Woodcut on Japan. 52,5 x 49 cm. (f. 59,5 x 56 cm). Inscribed in pencil lower left 'Nachlass Otto Pankok', signed 'Eva Pankok' and monogram. in print. Minor foxing in isolated areas. Framed behind glass (unopened). Provenance: North Rhine-Westphalian corporate collection. OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'ZIEGE' (1947) Holzschnitt auf Japan. 52,5 x 49 cm. (R. 59,5 x 56 cm). Unten rechts mit Bleistift bez. 'Nachlass Otto Pankok', signiert 'Eva Pankok' und im Druck monogrammiert. Vereinzelt min. stockfleckig. Hinter Glas gerahmt (ungeöffnet). Provenienz: Nordrhein-Westfälische Unternehmenssammlung.

    Hargesheimer Kunstauktionen Düsseldorf
  • OTTO PANKOK - 'TAUBE' (1952)
    Dec. 14, 2024

    OTTO PANKOK - 'TAUBE' (1952)

    Est: €150 - €300

    OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'DOVE' (1952) Stone etching on gold ground, on vellum. Print size 32,4 x 18,3 cm, visible size 49,5 x 34 cm. (f. 51 x 35,5 cm). Signed in pencil lower right. Slightly browned, light-stained. Framed behind glass (unopened). Provenance: Private collection Lower Rhine. OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'TAUBE' (1952) Steinätzung auf Goldgrung, auf Velin. DM 32,4 x 18,3 cm, SM 49,5 x 34 cm. (R. 51 x 35,5 cm). Unten rechts mit Bleistift signiert. Leicht gebräunt, mit Lichtrand. Hinter Glas gerahmt (ungeöffnet). Provenienz: Privatsammlung Niederrhein.

    Hargesheimer Kunstauktionen Düsseldorf
  • OTTO PANKOK - 'TRAUERNDE RINGELA' (1947)
    Dec. 14, 2024

    OTTO PANKOK - 'TRAUERNDE RINGELA' (1947)

    Est: €200 - €400

    OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'MOURNING RINGELA' (1947) Lithograph von vellum. Print size 47,5 x 32,3 cm, visible size 55 x 38 cm. (f. 76 x 57 cm). Signed in pencil lower right and monogr. in print. Min. foxing, some traces of creasing. Mounted and framed behind glass (unopened). Literature: Timm WL 73B. Provenance: Private collection Düsseldorf. OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'TRAUERNDE RINGELA' (1947) Lithografie auf Velin. DM 47,5 x 32,3 cm, SM 55 x 38 cm. (R. 76 x 57 cm). Unten rechts mit Bleistift signiert sowie im Druck monogr. Min. stockfleckig, part. mit Knickspuren. Im Passepartout und hinter Glas gerahmt (ungeöffnet). Literatur: Timm WL 73B. Provenienz: Privatsammlung Düsseldorf.

    Hargesheimer Kunstauktionen Düsseldorf
  • OTTO PANKOK - 'FRAU IN DER KÜCHE' (1915)
    Dec. 14, 2024

    OTTO PANKOK - 'FRAU IN DER KÜCHE' (1915)

    Est: €500 - €1,000

    OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'WOMAN IN THE KITCHEN' (1915) Drypoint on brownish paper. Visible size 31 x 31 cm. (f. 44,5 x 43 cm). Signed in pencil lower right, inscr. 'No-1-6' and signed in the plate on the right. Portrait of Menken Trino. Browned, part. with light stains. Mounted and framed behind glass (unopened). Literature: WR 61. OTTO PANKOK 1893 Mühlheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel 'FRAU IN DER KÜCHE' (1915) Kaltnadel auf bräunlichem Papier. SM 31 x 31 cm. (R. 44,5 x 43 cm). Unten rechts mit Bleistift handsigniert, unten links bez. 'No-1-6' sowie seitlich rechts in der Platte signiert. Bildnis Menken Trino. Gebräunt, part. mit hellen Flecken. Im Passepartout und hinter Glas gerahmt (ungeöffnet). Literatur: WR 61.

    Hargesheimer Kunstauktionen Düsseldorf
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 08, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 08, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 08, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Sgned - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 08, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Sgned - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 08, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed - original starting bid €45
    Dec. 08, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed - original starting bid €45

    Est: €100 - €200

    Hand signed Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok (deutsch, 1893 - 1966), Die Nova-Mahala (Türkinnen), Holzschnitt auf Papier, unten rechts signiert, Blatmaß: 69 x 51 cm, Rahmen: 75 x 56 cm. Guter, altersbedingter Zustand.
    Dec. 07, 2024

    Otto Pankok (deutsch, 1893 - 1966), Die Nova-Mahala (Türkinnen), Holzschnitt auf Papier, unten rechts signiert, Blatmaß: 69 x 51 cm, Rahmen: 75 x 56 cm. Guter, altersbedingter Zustand.

    Est: -

    Otto Pankok (deutsch, 1893 - 1966), Die Nova-Mahala (Türkinnen), Holzschnitt auf Papier, unten rechts signiert, Blatmaß: 69 x 51 cm, Rahmen: 75 x 56 cm. Guter, altersbedingter Zustand.

    Auktionshaus Demessieur
  • Otto Pankok (deutsch, 1893 - 1966), Eselreiter, Linolschnitt auf Papier, u. l. signiert, Lichtmaße: 31 x 41,5 cm, Rahmen: 46 x 56 cm. Guter, altersbedingter Zustand.
    Dec. 07, 2024

    Otto Pankok (deutsch, 1893 - 1966), Eselreiter, Linolschnitt auf Papier, u. l. signiert, Lichtmaße: 31 x 41,5 cm, Rahmen: 46 x 56 cm. Guter, altersbedingter Zustand.

    Est: -

    Otto Pankok (deutsch, 1893 - 1966), Eselreiter, Linolschnitt auf Papier, u. l. signiert, Lichtmaße: 31 x 41,5 cm, Rahmen: 46 x 56 cm. Guter, altersbedingter Zustand.

    Auktionshaus Demessieur
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 07, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 07, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 07, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 07, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed - original starting bid €45
    Dec. 07, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed - original starting bid €45

    Est: €100 - €200

    Hand signed in pencil Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35
    Dec. 07, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed - original starting bid €35

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Pankok, Otto
    Dec. 06, 2024

    Pankok, Otto

    Est: €140 - €200

    (1893 Mühlheim a.d. Ruhr - Wesel 1966). Laufendes Pferd. Holzschnitt, gegenseit. Reproduktion auf J.W.Zanders. 15 x 30, Blgr. 29,5 x 50 cm. Unt. re. sign. - Vereinz. leicht angestaubt u. fingerfl. - Zimmermann WH 229: Vom Kunstverein Kassel wurden 305 Reproduktionen hergestellt, die z.T. seitenverkehrt sind. D

    Kiefer Buch- und Kunstauktionen
  • Pankok, Otto: Warnender Hahn
    Nov. 30, 2024

    Pankok, Otto: Warnender Hahn

    Est: €200 - €300

    Warnender Hahn Holzschnitt auf faserigem Japan. 1960. 64,5 x 44,5 cm (71,7 x 50,5 cm). Signiert "Otto Pankok". Auflage 5 Ex. Zimmermann WH 620. Das Motiv wurde von Pankok auch "Krähender Hahn und Huhn" bezeichnet. Prachtvoller, klarer Druck mit Rand. Sehr selten. - Wir bitten darum, Zustandsberichte zu den Losen zu erfragen, da der Erhaltungszustand nur in Ausnahmefällen im Katalog angegeben ist. - Please ask for condition reports for individual lots, as the condition is usually not mentioned in the catalogue.

    Bassenge Auctions
  • PANKOK, Otto (*1893 Mülheim a. d. Ruhr; †1966 Wesel),
    Nov. 23, 2024

    PANKOK, Otto (*1893 Mülheim a. d. Ruhr; †1966 Wesel),

    Est: -

    PANKOK, Otto (*1893 Mülheim a. d. Ruhr; †1966 Wesel), Holzschnitt, "Ehra im Wind", re. unten sign., Blattmaß ca 35,5 x 24 cm, Wasserflecken, Holzleiste, min. best., hG

    zeitGenossen Antiquitäten - Kunst - Design
  • Otto Pankok (1893 Saarn bei Mülheim – Wesel 1966) – Mädchen mit zwei Kindern (stehende Figurengruppe)
    Nov. 18, 2024

    Otto Pankok (1893 Saarn bei Mülheim – Wesel 1966) – Mädchen mit zwei Kindern (stehende Figurengruppe)

    Est: €3,000 - €4,000

    Bronze mit schwarzer Patina. (1932). Höhe ca. 40 cm. Posthumer Guss, Auflagenhöhe unbekannt. Mit dem eingeschlagenen Monogramm unten seitlich sowie dem Gießerstempel „SCHMÄKE DÜSSELDORF“. Roland 41. Leicht verstaubte Oberfläche, partiell geringfügig berieben. Insgesamt in guter Erhaltung. Taxation: differenzbesteuert (VAT: Margin Scheme)

    Karl & Faber
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed
    Nov. 16, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Hand signed in pencil Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed
    Nov. 16, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Hand signed in pencil Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok, "Raklo mit Mütze", Holzschnitt von 1943, Arik Brauer, "Zeit zu Tanzen", Aquatinta von 1968/70 & Karl Korab, "Stillleben mit Ball", Farbserigraphie von 1972
    Nov. 08, 2024

    Otto Pankok, "Raklo mit Mütze", Holzschnitt von 1943, Arik Brauer, "Zeit zu Tanzen", Aquatinta von 1968/70 & Karl Korab, "Stillleben mit Ball", Farbserigraphie von 1972

    Est: €400 - €600

    Otto Pankok, "Raklo mit Mütze", Holzschnitt von 1943, Arik Brauer, "Zeit zu Tanzen", Aquatinta von 1968/70 & Karl Korab, "Stillleben mit Ball", Farbserigraphie von 1972 Otto Pankok, 1893 Mühlheim - 1966 Wesel, "Raklo mit Mütze", Holzschnitt, 16,5 x 14 cm, unter P.p., o. Rahmen; Arik Brauer, bürgerlich Erich Brauer, 1929 - Wien - 2021, "Zeit zu Tanzen" aus: Chassidische Erzählungen (1968-1970), Aquatinta-Radierung, 20,5 x 24,5 cm, sign. u. num. 253/300 (LX), o. Rahmen; Karl Korab, *1937 Falkenstein, österreichischer bildender Künstler, hier: "Stillleben mit Ball", Farbserigraphie, 48 x 42 cm, sign., dat. u. bez. "E.d.A,", o. Rahmen Otto Pankok, "Raklo mit Mütze", woodcut from 1943, Arik Brauer, "Zeit zu Tanzen", aquatint from 1968/70 & Karl Korab, "Stillleben mit Ball", colour silkscreen from 1972 Otto Pankok, 1893 Mühlheim - 1966 Wesel, "Raklo mit Mütze", woodcut, 16.5 x 14 cm, under passepartout, without frame; Arik Brauer, bourgeois Erich Brauer, 1929 - Vienna - 2021, "Zeit zu Tanzen" from: Chassidische Erzählungen (1968-1970), aquatint etching, 20.5 x 24.5 cm, sign. and numbered 253/300 (LX), without frame; Karl Korab, *1937 Falkenstein, Austrian visual artist, here: "Stillleben mit Ball", colour silkscreen, 48 x 42 cm, signed, dated and inter alia inscribed "E.d.A,", without frame

    K&K – Auktionen in Heidelberg
  • Otto Pankok "Zwei Kinder". 1932.
    Nov. 02, 2024

    Otto Pankok "Zwei Kinder". 1932.

    Est: €950 - €1,100

    Otto Pankok 1893 Mülheim Saar – 1966 Wesel Gerhard Bosse 1922 Wurzen – 2012 Takatsuki, Japan Kaltnadelradierung mit Plattenton. In der Platte u.li. monogrammiert "OP". Unterhalb der Darstellung u.re. signiert und datiert "Otto Pankok 32". U.li. in Blei bezeichnet von fremder Hand. Einer von sechs bekannten Abzügen. WVZ Jäger WR 575. Provenienz: Nachlass Sammlung Gerhard Bosse. Otto Pankok 1893 Mülheim Saar – 1966 Wesel 1912–13 Studium an den Kunstakademien Düsseldorf und Weimar. 1914–18 Kriegsdienst. 1937 Beschlagnahmung seines Werkes. 1947–58 Professur mit einer Zeichenklasse an der Kunstakademie Düsseldorf. 1948 Veröffentlichung des Buches "Deutsche Holzschneider". 1958 Übersiedlung nach Drevenack. Gerhard Bosse 1922 Wurzen – 2012 Takatsuki, Japan Deutscher Geiger und Dirigent. Aufgewachsen in Greiz. Erster Violinenunterricht von seinem Vater, dem Militärmusiker Oskar Bosse, später von Edgar Wollgandt in Leipzig. Ab 1940 Violinenstudium am Leipziger Konservatorium bei Walther Davisson, schon damals tätig als Substitut im Gewandhausorchester. 1943 Berufung ins Reichs-Bruckner-Orchester in Linz, Gesangsstudium am dortigen Konservatorium. 1948–51 Konzertmeister im Kleinen Rundfunkorchester Weimar, 1949 Ernennung zum Professor an der Musikhochschule Franz Liszt. 1951 Erster Konzertmeister des Leipziger Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchesters unter Hermann Abendroth. Professur an der Musikhochschule. 1955–87 Konzertmeister des Gewandhausorchesters unter den Dirigenten Franz Konwitschny, Václav Neumann und Kurt Masur. 1955–77 Primarius des Gewandhausquartetts. 1963 Gründung des Bachorchesters, welches Bosse bis 1987 selbst leitete. 1980 Gründung des Kirishima International Music Festival in Japan. Gastdirigent der New Japan Philharmonic und Gastprofessor an der Tokyo University of the Arts. Umsiedelung nach Takatsuki, dort Musikdirektor des Kobe City Chamber Orchestra, später auch Berater der New Japan Philharmonic.

    Schmidt Kunstauktionen Dresden OHG
  • Pankok, Otto: Krächzende Vögel
    Oct. 26, 2024

    Pankok, Otto: Krächzende Vögel

    Est: €500 - €700

    Otto Pankok 1893 Mülheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel Cawing birds Color woodcut on paper, 1965; H 500 mm, W 420 mm; signed lower right ''Otto Pankok''; Catalogue raisonne Zimmermann No. WH 758; one of only 9 prints

    Peter Karbstein - Kunst und Auktionshaus
  • Pankok, Otto: Kinder im Herbst
    Oct. 26, 2024

    Pankok, Otto: Kinder im Herbst

    Est: €400 - €600

    Otto Pankok 1893 Mülheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel Children in autumn Color woodcut on paper, 1946; H 265 mm, W 270 mm; signed lower right ''Otto Pankok''

    Peter Karbstein - Kunst und Auktionshaus
  • Pankok, Otto: Mit Kindern und Hund unterwegs
    Oct. 26, 2024

    Pankok, Otto: Mit Kindern und Hund unterwegs

    Est: €400 - €600

    Otto Pankok 1893 Mülheim/Ruhr - 1966 Wesel On the way with children and dog Woodcut on paper; H 152 mm, W 301 mm; signed lower right ''Otto Pankok''

    Peter Karbstein - Kunst und Auktionshaus
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph
    Oct. 26, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph

    Est: €100 - €200

    Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed
    Oct. 26, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Hand signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Hand signed Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Sgned
    Oct. 26, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Sgned

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Oct. 26, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Oct. 26, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
  • Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed
    Oct. 26, 2024

    Otto Pankok - Offsetlithograph - Signed

    Est: €100 - €200

    Signed in the print. Pankok was born in Mülheim on the Ruhr. In 1912 he began his formal training as an artist at the Art Academies in Düsseldorf and Weimar. After only a few months he left the Weimar Academy, where his teachers were Fritz Mackensen and Albin Egger-Lienz, and went on a study trip to the Netherlands with Werner Gilles. Afterwards (1914), he spent two months in Paris, where he attended the Académie russe and the Académie de la Grande Chaumière. Between 1914 and 1917 he was a soldier in France in World War I. Returning to Düsseldorf in 1919, he was a founder of the "Junge Rheinland" (Young Rhineland) group. With Otto Dix, Gert Heinrich Wollheim, and Adolf Uzarski, among others, he was one of the painters championed by the art dealer Johanna Ey. In 1921 he married the journalist Hulda Droste and their daughter Eva was born in 1925. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Pankok was declared a degenerate artist. Subsequently, 56 of his pictures were seized from museums, some of which were included in the infamous exhibition Entartete Kunst (Degenerate Art), mounted by the Nazis in Munich in 1937. Following the war (from 1947 to 1958) he was a professor at the Academy of Fine Arts in Düsseldorf, where Günter Grass, Gotthard Graubner and Günther Uecker were among his students. Memorial plaque at Otto Pankok's house in Düsseldorf-Oberkassel After retirement, he moved to Haus Esselt in Drevenack, where after his death a selection from his work with archive was set up in a museum showing. Except in the years of the Nazi regime, Pankok traveled extensively and painted on his journeys. He died in Wesel.

    Art Atelier
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