Merchant Navy summer officer's jacket with buttons of the shipping company Hambu…
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Merchant Navy summer officer's jacket with buttons of the shipping company Hamburg-Südamerikanische Dampfschifffahrts-Gesellschaft (HSDG),

7083 

Merchant Navy summer officer's jacket with buttons of the sh

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Prof. Ivo Hauptmann, Portrait of a lady Woman with blonde hair and green dress looking at the viewer, watercolour over graphite, signed and dated "Ivo Hauptmann 1968" below the depiction on the right, stamped "Ivo Hauptmann Nachlaß" on the reverse, somewhat wavy due to the material, sheet dimensions approx. 46.5 x 38.5 cm. Artist info: German painter and graphic artist. Painter and graphic artist (1886 Erkner near Berlin - 1973 Hamburg), eldest son of Gerhart Hauptmann, youth in Dresden, here acquaintance with Otto Mueller, with whom he travelled to Switzerland and the Riviera in 1900, 1903 studies at the Académie Julian in Paris, 1903-04 pupil of Lovis Corinth in Berlin, studied 1904-09 at the Weimar Academy under Hans Olde, here master pupil of Ludwig von Hofmann and friendship with Hans Arp, Henry van der Velde and Edvard Munch, 1907 Travelled to Greece with Gerhart Hauptmann and Ludwig von Hoffmann, 1909-12 Stayed in Paris and studied at the Académie Ranson with Pierre Bonnard, Maurice Denis and Paul Signac, where he became friends with Rainer Maria Rilke and Auguste Rodin, 1911-14 member of the "Société Indépendants", 1912 married Erica von Scheel, 1913-19 worked in Hamburg-Dockenhuden and was a pupil of Arthur Illies at the Kunstgewerbeschule, 1914 co-founder of the Freie Sezession Berlin, 1915-18 military service in the First World War, 1919-25 freelance artist. World War I, 1919-25 freelance in Dresden-Loschwitz, 1925 moved to Hamburg-Altona, here as authorised signatory employee of the Otto Blumenfeld shipping company, from 1914 member of the Dresdner Künstlerbund and the Dresdner Künstlerverein and 1928-33 member of the Hamburg Secession, after 1933 defamed as "degenerate", 1936 with Max Pechstein in Leba, until 1938 regular stays with his father in the "Wiesenstein" house in Agnetendorf in the Riesengebirge, at Haus Seedorn in Kloster on Hiddensee, in Rapallo and Ascona, after 1945 re-founded the Hamburg Secession and became its chairman for a time, 1950 founding member of the Hamburg Academy of Fine Arts and from 1965 its honorary president, 1955-65 lecturer at the Hamburg University of Fine Arts (HBK), 1961 Federal Cross of Merit, 1973 professorship awarded by the Hamburg Senate, source: Thieme-Becker, Vollmer, Saur "Bio-Bibliographisches Künstlerlexikon", Dressler, Rump and Wikipedia.

Prof. Ivo Hauptmann, Portrait of a young lady a young woman looking at the viewer with a pinned-up hairstyle and blue dress in an interior, graphite and watercolour on laid paper, signed and dated "Ivo Hauptmann 1967" in pencil lower right, powerful sheet of bright colours, stamped "Ivo Hauptmann Nachlaß" on the reverse, somewhat wavy due to the material, sheet dimensions approx. 47 x 38.5 cm. Artist info: German painter and graphic artist. Painter and graphic artist (1886 Erkner near Berlin - 1973 Hamburg), eldest son of Gerhart Hauptmann, youth in Dresden, here acquaintance with Otto Mueller, with whom he travelled to Switzerland and the Riviera in 1900, 1903 studies at the Académie Julian in Paris, 1903-04 pupil of Lovis Corinth in Berlin, studied 1904-09 at the Weimar Academy under Hans Olde, here master pupil of Ludwig von Hofmann and friendship with Hans Arp, Henry van der Velde and Edvard Munch, 1907 Travelled to Greece with Gerhart Hauptmann and Ludwig von Hoffmann, 1909-12 Stayed in Paris and studied at the Académie Ranson with Pierre Bonnard, Maurice Denis and Paul Signac, where he became friends with Rainer Maria Rilke and Auguste Rodin, 1911-14 member of the "Société Indépendants", 1912 married Erica von Scheel, 1913-19 worked in Hamburg-Dockenhuden and was a pupil of Arthur Illies at the Kunstgewerbeschule, 1914 co-founder of the Freie Sezession Berlin, 1915-18 military service in the First World War, 1919-25 freelance artist. 1919-25 freelance in Dresden-Loschwitz, 1925 moved to Hamburg-Altona, here as an authorised signatory employee of the Otto Blumenfeld shipping company, from 1914 member of the Dresdner Künstlerbund and the Dresdner Künstlerverein and 1928-33 member of the Hamburg Secession, after 1933 defamed as "degenerate", 1936 with Max Pechstein in Leba, until 1938 regular stays with his father in the "Wiesenstein" house in Agnetendorf in the Riesengebirge, at Haus Seedorn in Kloster on Hiddensee, in Rapallo and Ascona, after 1945 re-founded the Hamburg Secession and became its chairman for a time, 1950 founding member of the Hamburg Academy of Fine Arts and from 1965 its honorary president, 1955-65 lecturer at the Hamburg University of Fine Arts (HBK), 1961 Federal Cross of Merit, 1973 title of professor by the Hamburg Senate, source: Thieme-Becker, Vollmer, Saur "Bio-Bibliographisches Künstlerlexikon", Dressler, Rump and Wikipedia.

Video Action II 'Home Version' Gaming Console with Original Box (Universal Research Laboratories) Exceedingly rare original ‘home version’ of the Video Action (Model VA-II) gaming console released by Universal Research Laboratories in 1974-1975. The heavy console, 24″ x 4″ x 14″, features a large game control base with four paddle controls and a central paddle display button. The front panel of the lower base features a knob for “Game Volume,” an on/off “Game Switch,” a ‘Game On’ indicator light, and a speaker vent, and the back panel contains a “Slo-Blow Fuse,” power cord, control cable receptacle, and a TV receptacle. Includes its original cardboard “Video Action” box by Universal Research Laboratories, which features various wear and stains. The console is in fine, untested condition. Accompanied by a printed copy of the Video Action II user manual. The Video Action (Model VA-II) was an early home gaming console released by Universal Research Laboratories (URL) in the summer of 1974 as part of the early wave of Pong-style games. The console included three built-in games - Hockey, Soccer, and Tennis - and early models of the VA-II were sold with a 12-inch Broadmoor television for $499, targeting bars and waiting rooms; another version, sans the TV, was offered the next year for $299. The VA-II was well-made but overly expensive, relying on the fact that it was the lone alternative to the Magnavox Odyssey. In 1975, at least five other consumer-grade PONG-style consoles were released in North America, including the Television Tennis by Executive Games, the FD3000 by First Dimension, both the Magnavox Odyssey 100 and 200, and the Tele-Games PONG (the Sears-branded version of the Atari PONG). URL released Video Action III and the INDY 500 in 1976, and then filed for bankruptcy the following year.