Null Single shot rifle, carbine Mod. 1931 
Cal. 7,5x55, SN. 564196, matching num…
Description

Single shot rifle, carbine Mod. 1931 Cal. 7,5x55, SN. 564196, matching numbers, incl. magazine. Bright bore. Valid German proof mark. Complete original finish. Bright bolt. Stripped walnut stock. Length 111 cm. WBK: Attention - For this gun we will need to obtain an export license for you, based on your import permit (if needed in your country) or through your firearms dealer - more info here Condition: I - II

12584 

Single shot rifle, carbine Mod. 1931 Cal. 7,5x55, SN. 564196, matching numbers, incl. magazine. Bright bore. Valid German proof mark. Complete original finish. Bright bolt. Stripped walnut stock. Length 111 cm. WBK: Attention - For this gun we will need to obtain an export license for you, based on your import permit (if needed in your country) or through your firearms dealer - more info here Condition: I - II

Auction is over for this lot. See the results

You may also like

[Balzac et ses amis] Lot of 6 books: A Augustin-Thierry, La princesse Belgiojoso. Paris, Plon, 1926. Fair condition. Mme Surville, Le compagnon du foyer. Stuttgart, Hallberger, 1855. Half basane, spines split. Pizzagalli, L'Amica Clara Maffei e il suo salotto nel Risorgimento. Milan, BUR, 2004. Hommage à George Sand, revue de l'Académie du Centre, 1975. Echinard et Jessula, Léon Gozlan. Collection IMMAJ, 2003. Arrigon, Balzac et la "contessa". Paris, Les portiques, sd. [Balzac et ses amis] Set of 4 books: Bondy, une femme d'esprit en 1830 - madame de Girardin. Lafitte, 1928. EO one of 17 hollande, second paper. Séché, Delphine Gay. Mercure, 1910. Longhi, L'educazione esemplare - Zulma Carraud un'amica di Balzac scrive per l'infanzia. Schena, 1984. We enclose 6 books. A Hertor Berge, Le commis banquier. Bordeaux, 1856. Rare curiosity. Biré, Houvelles causeries historiques et littéraires, 1927. Excerpt from the volume, only the article on Lovenjoul. Dore Ashton, A fable of Modern Art, Thames and Hudson, 1980. The author quotes Balzac as much as Picasso or Cézanne. Wages and the cost of living in various periods up to 1910. Photocopy of 1911 edition. Guide du voyageur du chemin de fer de Paris à Tours. Photocopy of 1846 edition. Considérations sur l'histoire médicale et statistique du Choléra-Morbus. Photocopy of the 1832 edition. Balzac et son temps, Set of 12 volumes: Burnand, La vie quotidienne en France en 1830. Hachette, 1947. Paperback. Pelletan, De 1815 à nos jours. Charavay-Mantoux-Martin, 1891. Publisher's hardback. La Gorce, Louis Philippe 1830-1848. Plon, 1931. paperback, one of 30 copies on pur fil lafuma. Charassin, Dictionnaire des racines et dérivés de la langue française. Héois, 1842. Half-basane, lacking on spine. Toledano, La vie de famille sous la restauration et la monarchie de juillet. Albin-Michel, 1943. Paperback. Henriot, Les romantiques. Albin-Michel, 1953. Linda Kelly, The young romantics Paris 1827-1837. London, Sidney, Toronto, The Bodley Head, 1976. d'Ariste, La vie et le monde du Boulevard. 1830 - 1870. A dandy: Nestor Roqueplan. Tallandier, 1930. Bory, La Révolution de juillet - 29 juillet 1830. Gallimard, 1972. Paperback. Anquetil, Histoire de France. Jubin, 1829-1831. Volumes 12 to 15, 4 volumes. A.-F. Teulet and Urbain Loiseau, Les Codes. Preceded by Memento de l'étudiant en Droit. Paris, Videcocq, 1840 - In -12 of XXXVI + 815 p. 2-column printing. Bookplate from the library of H. Hottinguer. Half-bound in green calf, smooth spine decorated with gilt fleurons. A good copy.

JOAN HERNÁNDEZ PIJUAN (Barcelona, 1931 - 2005). Untitled, 1956. Oil on paper adhered to board. Signed, dated and dedicated in the upper left corner. Measurements: 50 x 64 cm; 81 x 97 cm (frame). This oil on paper belongs to an early stage of the artist in which he was interested in formal simplification, influenced by both avant-garde expressionism and Romanesque art. Joan Hernández Pijuan began his training in Barcelona, attending the La Lonja and Sant Jordi Schools of Fine Arts, before completing his studies at the School of Fine Arts in Paris. Appointed professor at the Faculty of Fine Arts in Barcelona in 1981, Hernández Pijuan occupies a unique position among Spanish artists of recent decades. The strength of his creative individuality places him on the fringes of the successive dominant trends and fashions, but does not prevent us from recognising in his work a profound identification with the aesthetic concerns of his time. Hernández Pijuan began his career practising a tragic expressionism with a strong social charge, and at this time he formed, together with the other members of the Sílex Group, the so-called Barcelona School. In the seventies he simplified his expression to the point of adopting geometric figuration, a style he left behind in the following decade to focus on informalism. In fact, interest in and fascination with this painter's career continues to be as strong as ever, and he is the subject of new exhibitions and public displays of his work. During his lifetime he had solo exhibitions in several Spanish cities as well as in Zurich, Milan, Johannesburg, Cologne, Geneva, New York, Paris and Osaka, among other cities around the world, and in 2003 he was the subject of a major retrospective exhibition at the MACBA in Barcelona, which was subsequently shown at the Musée d'Art et Histoire de Neuchatel (France), the Konsthalle de Malmö (Sweden) and the Galleria Comunale d'Arte Moderna in Bologna (Italy). Even after his death his work has continued to be shown internationally, as evidenced by the exhibitions dedicated to his work held at the Flowers Gallery in London (2006), the Cervantes Institutes in New York, Chicago and Lisbon (2007), the Museo de Arte Abstracto Español in Cuenca (2008), the Andres Thalmann Gallery in Zurich (2009), the Baukunst in Cologne (2010), the Altana Kulturstiftung in Bad Homburg (Germany, 2011) and the Museum of Modern Art in Moscow (2012), among many others. Hernández Pijuan was dean of the Faculty of Fine Arts at the University of Barcelona, and in 2000 he was appointed a member of the Real Academia de San Fernando in Madrid. In 1981 he received the Premio Nacional de Artes Plásticas, in 1985 the Cruz de Sant Jordi and, in 2004, the City of Barcelona Prize. He was also awarded the Prize of the Directorate General of Fine Arts at the National Exhibition in Alicante in 1957, the First Prize for Painting "Peintres Residents" in Paris (1958), the "Malibor" Prize at the Ljubljana Biennial of Engraving (1965), the International Biennial of Engraving in Krakow (1966) and the "Vijesnik u Srijedu" editorial prize in Zagreb (1970). Hernández Pijuán is represented at the MACBA, the Museum of Spanish Abstract Art in Cuenca, the Reina Sofía in Madrid, the Patio Herreriano Museum in Valladolid and the Basque Museum of Contemporary Art, as well as in foreign centres such as the Guggenheim Museum in New York, the Liaunig (Austria), the Helsinki Museum of Contemporary Art in Helsinki, the Helsinki Museum of Fine Arts in Finland, the Helsinki Museum of Contemporary Art in Finland, the Helsinki Museum of Fine Arts in Finland and the Helsinki Museum of Contemporary Art in Finland, those of Contemporary Art in Helsinki and Luxembourg, the Kulturstiftung in Bad Homburg (Austria), the Yamaguchi Gallery in Osaka (Japan), the Palace of Fine Arts in Brussels, the National Gallery in Montreal, the Museum of Modern Art in Buenos Aires and the Sztuki Museum in Lodz (Poland).

RAMON CASAS CARBÓ (Barcelona, 1866 - 1932). "Seated lady". Mixed media (pastel and charcoal) on paper. Signed in the lower right corner. With "Pèl i Ploma" stamp in the lower right corner. This drawing was conceived as a gift for the subscribers of the magazine. Measurements: 32 x 25 cm; 48 x 41 cm (frame). Drawing made by Ramon Casas for the artistic and literary magazine "Pèl i Ploma", of which 100 issues were published between 1899 and 1903. Casas himself financed its edition and was its artistic director and main illustrator, while Miquel Utrillo was in charge of the literary section and Emilio Galcerán was in charge of the administrative part. It was one of the most representative magazines of Catalan modernism, a driving force of this movement and a platform for the dissemination of modern art. In this work Casas represents an elegant lady dressed according to the bourgeois fashion of the beginning of the century. It is an image charged with instantaneity, typical of the feminine representations of the Catalan school of the late 19th century. It combines the formal sensuality of the sinuous and expressive line, typically modernist, with the great realism with which a strictly contemporary image has been captured. It is a work closely linked to the graphic design of the time; the expressive linearity, the sobriety of the colors and the attention to current themes, coincide with the features of the posters and illustrations for magazines. An outstanding painter and draftsman, Casas began painting as a disciple of Joan Vicens. In 1881 he made his first trip to Paris, where he completed his training at the Carolus Duran and Gervex academies. The following year he participated for the first time in an exhibition at the Sala Parés in Barcelona, and in 1883 he presented a self-portrait at the Salon des Champs Elysées in Paris, which earned him an invitation to become a member of the Salon de la Societé d'Artistes Françaises. He spent the following years traveling and painting between Paris, Barcelona, Madrid and Granada. In 1886, suffering from tuberculosis, he settled in Barcelona to recover. There he came into contact with Santiago Rusiñol, Eugène Carrière and Ignacio Zuloaga. After a trip through Catalonia with Rusiñol in 1889, Casas returned to Paris with his friend. The following year he took part in a group exhibition at the Sala Parés, together with Rusiñol and Clarasó, and in fact the three of them continued to hold joint exhibitions there until Rusiñol's death in 1931. His works at this time are halfway between academicism and French impressionism, in a sort of germ of what would later become Catalan modernism. His fame continued to spread throughout Europe, and he held successful exhibitions in Madrid and Berlin, as well as participating in the Chicago World's Fair of 1893. Casas settled permanently in Barcelona, immersed in the modernist environment, although he continued to travel to Paris for the annual salons. He financed the premises that would become a point of reference for the modernists, the café Els Quatre Gats, inaugurated in 1897. Two years later he organized his first individual exhibition at the Sala Parés. While his fame as a painter grew, Casas began to work as a graphic designer, adopting the Art Nouveau style that came to define Catalan Modernism. In the following years his successes followed: he presented two works at the Universal Exhibition in Paris in 1900, won a prize in Munich in 1901, several of his works were included in the permanent exhibition of the Círculo del Liceo, had several international exhibitions and, in 1904, won first prize at the General Exhibition in Madrid. He is represented in the Prado Museum, the National Museum of Art of Catalonia, the Reina Sofia National Museum, the Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum, the Museum of Montserrat, the Cau Ferrat in Sitges, the Camón Aznar Museum in Zaragoza and the Contemporary Art Museums of Barcelona and Seville, among many others.