Аукцион 106 Часть 1 Special End of Year Sale in collaboration with the Rak Shnia Gallery only in Arugut: quality Israeli vintage, Israeli Ceramic, jewelry, Jewish history: books, documents, autographs and much more
от The Bidder
26.12.23
Harishonim 80, Arugut (wize: Rak Shnia Bakfar), Израиль

Please pay attention!

Viewing and collecting items from this auction will be from Arugut

(and not from the gallery in Gedera!)

Address: Hrishonim 80, Arugut (Waze: Rak Shnia Bakfar)


@@All the furniture items are only in self pick from the gallery in Arugut@@@


All the devices and clocks in this auction are sold as they are, there is no gurantee for order condition.


Purchasing jewelry and gems: The auction house provides a description of the diamonds and gems to the best of its understanding and based on the knowledge and experience of the auction house experts. However, the auction house does not undertake to accurately describe the items in terms of stone size, color, level of cleanliness, condition (including description of defects) and whether it has undergone treatment or painting and the buyer is responsible for inspecting the diamonds and gems before sale. For the avoidance of doubt, no option will be given to cancel the purchase of jewelry, diamonds and gems or return them after purchase, even if the description does not match the ite


In this auction like the previous auctions, unsold items are not offered for direct sale after auction ends! please bid and participate during the auction!

The sale commission is 20% + VAT on the commission only. in a week time from the auction.

A fee of 5% will be added to late payments.


The dollar exchange rate for this sale is: $=3.63


New customers who have participated a few times in auctions will usually be approved with a limit on the amount you can offer at least initially. If you want to raise the amount or remove the limit, you are welcome to contact us by phone.


In this auction to Israeli clients, payment will be possible directly upon completion of the auction (the second part)

You will receive the invoice for payment and then you can choose the requested shipping method.

Please note the different costs: courier delievery as well as the different registered shipping costs depending on the weight.

If you are unsure about the shipping cost (registered upon weight or special complicated/breakable items) please contact us before making the payment.

Buyers from abroad will receive an invoice within a business day from the end of the auction including the shipping cost for the items purchased and will be able to pay online by credit card.

We only use the Israeli Post services or DHL (more expensive).

Shippments can be choosen in one of forward options:

1. Registered shippping (Israel post) prices:

Up to 2 kilo at a cost of 28 NIS

2-5 Kilo cost 35 NIS.

5-10 kilo cost 40 NIS

10-20 kilo cost 50 NIS

2. Courier mail of Israel Post for a package of reasonable size (up to 50X50X50 cm) and up to 20 kilos at a cost of only NIS 45. (Warranty and insurance according to the terms of delivery of Israel Mail packages only!)


We try to get the deliveries out of the gallery within two business days at the latest. The delivery time of the items depends on the Israeli post and global post work. Each buyer who pays on delivery, will receive a detailed email with the tracking number and a link to the tracking on the mail site accordingly.


*** Please pay attention! there is no gurantee for damage/breakage to items in any type of mail (registered / couriers)! A customer who confirms the delivery of items, will take into account that the warranty will only be in the event of loss until the cost is covered by the postal services only ****


In cases of complecated items and fragile items, the auction house may take an additional cost to ensure the proper packaging of the items.


With certain items, large or particularly complex items, the buyer will have to coordinate collection from the Auction House.

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Аукцион закончен

ЛОТ 490:

Chaim Grade, Autograph on his Yiddish book: My Mother's Sabbaths, illust. by Ilya Schor, 1959
Der Mames ...

Продан за: $60
Стартовая цена:
$ 50
Комиссия аукционного дома: 20% Далее
НДС: 17% Только на комиссию
Аукцион проходил 26.12.23 в The Bidder
теги:

Chaim Grade, Autograph on his Yiddish book: My Mother's Sabbaths, illust. by Ilya Schor, 1959
Der Mames Shabosim My Mother's Sabbaths
Inscribed /dedication by the author on the half-title page, 1961
NY: Cyco, 1959. Second Edition. 477 pp In Yiddish , Design of the book, Illustrated title page, and titles by Ilya Schor
Hardcover. 23.8 x 16 cm.
Condition: light wear to cover, good condition.
Weight: 780 gr.
Ilya Schor (April 16, 1904 – June 7, 1961) was an artist, a painter, jeweler, engraver, sculptor, and renowned artist of Judaica.
Ilya Schor was born in Złoczów (Galicia), in the Austrian Empire (now Zolochiv, Lviv Oblast, Ukraine) in 1904. He came from a deeply Hasidic family. His father, Naftali, was a folk-artist, painting colorfully illustrated store signs for local merchants. Schor first trained as an apprentice in metalcrafts and engraving before enrolling at the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts in 1930 where he studied painting. In 1937, Ilya was awarded a grant by the Polish government to study in Paris. He exhibited successfully at the Salon d'Automne in 1938.
Ilya Schor and his artist wife, Resia, immigrated to the United States in December 1941, from Marseilles, via Lisbon, after fleeing Paris in late May 1940. The couple had two daughters, born in New York City: artist and writer Mira Schor (b. 1950) and the late literary scholar and theorist, Naomi Schor (1943–2001).[1]
Chaim Grade (Yiddish: חיים גראַדע) (April 4, 1910 – June 26, 1982) was one of the leading Yiddish writers of the twentieth century.
Grade was born in Vilnius, Russian Empire and died in The Bronx, New York. He is buried in Riverside Cemetery, Saddle Brook, New Jersey.
Grade was raised Orthodox-leaning, and he studied in yeshiva as a teenager, but ended up with a secular outlook, in part due to his poetic ambitions. Losing his family in the Holocaust, he resettled in New York, and increasingly took to fiction, writing in Yiddish. Initially he was reluctant to have his work translated.[1][2]
He was praised by Elie Wiesel as "one of the great—if not the greatest—of living Yiddish novelists."[3] In 1970 he won the Itzik Manger Prize for contributions to Yiddish letters.[4]