Auction 90 Fine Judaica Including: Printed Books, Manuscripts,  Graphic & Ceremonial Arts
By Kestenbaum & Company
Jul 21, 2020
Brooklyn Navy Yard: Building 77 Suite 1108 Brooklyn NY, 11205, United States
The auction has ended

LOT 23:

ANTISEMITIC CERAMIC GERMAN BEER-STEIN.
Cylindrical, off-white glazed ceramic stein with a bas-relief ...

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Start price:
$ 4,000
Estimated price :
$4,000 - $5,000
Buyer's Premium: 25%
sales tax: 8.875% On the full lot's price and commission
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations
Auction took place on Jul 21, 2020 at Kestenbaum & Company
tags:

ANTISEMITIC CERAMIC GERMAN BEER-STEIN.



Cylindrical, off-white glazed ceramic stein with a bas-relief design with red-brown and gray coloring, curved handle with geometric decoration, lid with pewter rim, flat ceramic disc inlay, pewter thumblift and pewter mountings.

c. 1890


The inlay relief has a German text circling the top border and depicts a Jewish man in left profile with a grim expression and a large hooked nose marching on barren, uneven ground. He has a walking stick in his right hand and carries his belongings in a sack tied to a stick held over his left shoulder. Marked around top edge : DER JTZIG NIMMT DEN STAB ZUR HAND UND RAISET INS GELOBTELAND [“The Jew takes the rod to the hand and into the promised land.”] The stein has a red-brown glaze body with three scenes depicting Jews being expelled from Germany under the banner: Weiche Satan [“Get thee hence Satan.”] Also features a winged figure (representing Germania) standing on a book entitled "TALMUD" and encircled by a serpent. Height: 9 inches (23 cm), width: 4.5 inches (11.5 cm). Depth: 5 inches (14 cm). An unknown anti-Semitic German beer-stein with scenes on the body entirely different from others of this genre. Steins with anti-Jewish images were popular in late 19th century Germany. The constitution of the newly unified Germany, adopted in 1871, emancipated all Jews, yet subsequent decades saw a surge in widespread anti-Semitism, which soon became a popular cause of several German political parties. For a similar example of this beer-stein found in the Ehrenthal/Katz Collection, and housed in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, see: https://collections.ushmmorg/search/catalog/irn545039.
The inlay relief has a German text circling the top border and depicts a Jewish man in left profile with a grim expression and a large hooked nose marching on barren, uneven ground. He has a walking stick in his right hand and carries his belongings in a sack tied to a stick held over his left shoulder. Marked around top edge : DER JTZIG NIMMT DEN STAB ZUR HAND UND RAISET INS GELOBTELAND [“The Jew takes the rod to the hand and into the promised land.”] The stein has a red-brown glaze body with three scenes depicting Jews being expelled from Germany under the banner: Weiche Satan [“Get thee hence Satan.”] Also features a winged figure (representing Germania) standing on a book entitled "TALMUD" and encircled by a serpent. Height: 9 inches (23 cm), width: 4.5 inches (11.5 cm). Depth: 5 inches (14 cm). An unknown anti-Semitic German beer-stein with scenes on the body entirely different from others of this genre. Steins with anti-Jewish images were popular in late 19th century Germany. The constitution of the newly unified Germany, adopted in 1871, emancipated all Jews, yet subsequent decades saw a surge in widespread anti-Semitism, which soon became a popular cause of several German political parties. For a similar example of this beer-stein found in the Ehrenthal/Katz Collection, and housed in the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, see: https://collections.ushmmorg/search/catalog/irn545039.

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