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Salomon Garf

(Netherlands, 1879-1943)
Salomon Garf
(Netherlands, 1879-1943)

SALOMON GARF, olja på duk, sign.

"Spinster" 36,5x29.

Dåligt spänd duk. Färgbortfall. Intryckningsskador.

More information

Salomon Garf was educated at the Quellinus School and the state training institute for art teachers (Rijksacademie) in Amsterdam. In the evenings he attended classes in drawing and painting at the National Academy of Art, where he competed (unsuccessfully) for the famous Prix de Rome in 1904.
That same year he settled in the artists' village of Laren. In 1907 he married Eva Cosette Baszinger, and a son was born to the couple. Both wife and child frequently sat for his paintings.
After 1914 Garf lived and worked for years as a respected artist in the southern district of Amsterdam. Garf belonged to the art society Arti et Amicitiae and sat on its executive committee. The demand for his work flagged during the Depression, and once the German forces occupied the country they made it impossible for him to work at all. In August 1943 he was seized from his home, deported, and murdered in Auschwitz. His studio on Koninginneweg was plundered. The collection of the Jewish Historical Museum contains 18 works by Salomon Garf.

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4 000 SEK
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Covered by droit de suite

By law, the buyer will pay an artist fee for this work of art. This fee is 5% of the hammer price, or less. For more information about this law:

Sweden: BUS
Finland: Kuvasto

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