The best list of the Neumeister auction with old to contemporary art leads to works of classical modernism.

Not only was Gabriele Münter's painting "Tigerlilie" from 1932 doubled its average estimate with a result of 70,000 euros as the star lot, the hammer price for the painting "Tangsammler im Finistère" by the French post-impressionist Henri Moret was just as high (estimate 25,000 to 30,000 euros ).

A pointillist view of the port of Collioure, created by Moret's compatriot Achille Laugé, went from 8,000 to 20,000 euros.

Otto Modersohn's picture of his house with a cottage garden in Fischerhude, on the other hand, offered a northern atmosphere and, as expected, brought in 15,000 euros.

Plastics performed excellently.

A bronze “Composition” by Luxembourger Lucien Wercollier climbed from 1,400 to 13,000 euros, and a “Nana Pregnant” that was only seventeen centimeters high and that Niki de Saint Phalle sculpted in 1968/69 fetched 48,000 instead of 6,000 euros.

Hanneke Beaumont's life-size, seated "Figure N° 39" from 1999 doubled the estimate at 41,000 euros.

The youngest work in the auction was created by Wolfgang M. Heckl this year.

The general director of the Deutsches Museum in Munich and holder of a chair in science communication is a self-taught artist.

His "Also spoke Zarathustra", a colorful piece of AI art on Aludibond, brought in 24,000 euros (10,000/12,000).

The main lot of the porcelain offering, a Meissner beaker vase painted with “bird tree decor”, came in at 25,000 euros (10,000/15,000) for its blue Augustus Rex mark, which was only given to objects made for the collection or gifts of Augustus the Strong .

Three phone bidders were enough to multiply the estimates of six lots of Viennese porcelain.

For example, they drove two picture plates from 1805/07, showing Ganymede with the eagle and Narcissus, from 600 to 10,500 euros.

Among the approximately fifty objects from the estate of the collector Adam Sieder, a Gothic crescent moon Madonna from Thuringia with the hammer price of 22,000 euros (12,000/15,000) and an oil painting of the beheading of John the Baptist from 1510/20, based on Dürer motifs, stood out took for 30,000 euros (6000/8000).

The Portrait of a Master Builder, perhaps a work by the 18th-century Dutchman Jan Victors, lifted three phones from 2,500 to a whopping 35,000 euros, and Joseph Stieler's portrait of Maximilian II of Bavaria went for an underestimate of 40,000 euros.

On the other hand, only about half of the 44 lots from an icon collection found buyers, the highest hammer price was a crucifixion of Christ from the 18th century (2000/2500) at 2800 euros.