| March
29, 2007--Kestenbaum & Company conducted an auction of
Fine Judaica on Thursday, March 22nd. The results of this compact
auction of 252 lots exceeded all expectations with good selections
of Printed Books and Manuscripts including Bibles, Liturgy, Talmuds,
Hagadahs, French-Hebraica, Autograph Letters and 20th century Illustrated
Books among others.
A highly coveted illustrated Book of Ceremonies, a perfect copy
from a nobleman’s library, Amsterdam, 1645, was the top lot
of the sale bringing in a high price of $129,200 against at an estimate
of $50,000-70,000. Also performing extremely well in a section of
rare 16th century Constantinople Hebrew imprints was a scarce collection
of super-commentaries to Rashi, entitled Sepher
Canizal (circa 1520), that realized $92,040, nearly tripling
its pre-sale estimate of $30,000-40,000.
Important Chassidic texts were well represented with Schneur Zalman
of Liadi’s editio princeps of The Tanya---the fundamental
exposition of Chabad Chassidic philosophy, Slavuta, 1796, which
sold for $70,800; while among the Bibles, the most striking was
the Mortimer Schiff-Salman Schocken copy of the Estienne 1539 Hebrew
Bible, a beautiful wide-margined set, presented in a superlative
contemporary binding, which garnered $67,850 against an estimate
of $20,000-30,000.
The Talmud section of the sale featured noteworthy
lots including early fragments of extreme rarity--two unicum leaves
of a Spanish 15th century edition, which brought in $35,400; and
two early 16th century Tractates printed by Daniel Bomberg: Masecheth
Yoma which reached $30,680 and Masecheth
Bava Bathra which was purchased for $35,400.
Headlining the Hagadahs was a deluxe copy in an original binding
printed on premium paper of the celebrated and influential second
Amsterdam Hagadah, 1712, which realized $30,680.
In the Manuscripts section, the two most desirable lots were a group
of nineteen Autograph Letters Signed by Yitzchak Isaac Halevy, Hamburg,
1903-1913, attaining $35,400 and far exceeding its pre-sale estimate
of $4,000-6,000, and an exotic 19th century Prayer Book from the
Far East according to the rite of the Jews of Cochin which realized
$17,700 against its pre-auction estimate of $4,000-6,000.
Further sale highlights were Nachmanides’
Torath ha-Adam, 1519, which achieved $28,320, and the Book
of Esther illustrated by Arthur Szyk, Paris, 1927, which sold for
$10,030 against an estimate of $3,000-4,000. Also noteworthy was
a rare 18th century book on equestrianism with a most unusual supplement
containing a series of dialogues between Jewish horse traders in
their distinctly secretive Hebrew-German jargon; it garnered $12,980
against a pre-sale estimate of $7,000-9,000.
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