Christie’s offered the Bibliotheca Bibliographica Breslaueriana,  featuring catalogs, bindings and rare books and manuscripts from  the Breslauer Collection, during three sessions ending March 23.  The total was $4,271,196.   “The result of the first portion of was …100 percent sold and  the total nearly doubled the presale low estimate,” said Felix de  Marez Oyens, international director. All 150 lots in the first  portion found buyers for a total of $2,662,980.   “The exceptionally fine condition and the important bindings and  provenances made collectors, institutions and booksellers stretch  to acquire books from the most highly bibliophile reference  library ever assembled,” continued Mr Oyens. “If one book in the  sale is to be singled out, it has to be the Henry van de Velde  inlaid morocco binding, whose splendid technique matches its Art  Nouveau mosaic design.”   A member of the European trade purchased the Van de Velde  binding, executed circa 1897-98, for $156,000 ($50/70,000).   The top lot of the first portion was the philobiblon of Richardus  de Bury (1281-1345), Cologne, 1473, which sold to a member of the  New York trade for $240,000. The Lauderdale set of 71 early  English auction catalogs, mostly London or Oxford, 1674-1701, was  purchased by a New York dealer on behalf of the Grolier Club for  $168,000.   The Grolier Club also won the top lot of the second portion of  the auction, a set of 33 English auction catalogs, 1688-89,  London, for $192,000.   “There were no weak spots in this sale,” commented Ian Ehling, a  specialist in Christie’s books and manuscripts department. “The  most active bidders were professionals, closely followed by  libraries and private collectors. The Grolier Club seized the  opportunity to enrich their immense holdings, which are already  among the strongest in the world, behind the British Library and  the Bibliotheque nationale de France.”   Of 756 lots offered in the second portion, 742 found buyers for a  total of $1,608,216.   A collection of 47 catalogs from the Thomas King auction house,  London, 1788-1812, garnered $50,400 from a British dealer.  Members of the American, British and European trade figured  prominently in most of the buying action.   A continuation of the sale of the Breslauer Collection is planned  for June.
 
    



 
						