Leipzig University Library receives collection of medals made by local artist Bruno Eyermann

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October 11, 2018 – On 19 September 2018, the Leipzig University Library first presented its 218 newly-acquired collection of medals made by Bruno Eyermann (1888-1961) to the public. Eyermann was the central figure among Leipzig’s artistic medalists in the first half of the 20th century. Thanks to generous third-party funds, the library was able to purchase the extensive collection.

On September 19, 2018 the Leipzig University Library first presented the newly-acquired collection of medals made by Bruno Eyermann to the public. l. to r.: Prof. Dr. Ulrich Johannes Schneider, Director of Leipzig University Library; Detlev Hölscher, Fritz Rudolf Künker GmbH & Co. KG Osnabrück, and representative of the Verband der Deutschen Münzenhändler e.V. (VDDM); Prof. Dr. Frank Druffner, Deputy Secretary-General of the Kulturstiftung der Länder; Andreas Koch, from Sparkasse Leipzig; Alexander Salomon, Ostdeutsche Sparkassenstiftung; Monika Thieme, widow of the collector Klaus Thieme; Dr. Christoph Mackert, curator of the coin collection of the Leipzig University Library; Dr. Rainer Grund, curator of the coin cabinet of the Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden. Photo: Olaf Mokansky, Leipzig University Library.

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The newly-acquired Eyermann medal collection is of unique size and quality. The 218 medals represent over 80 percent of the known Eyermann oeuvre and cover all of his creative periods with items of especially high quality. Over decades, the collection had been compiled by the Leipzig graphic artist and numismatist Klaus Thieme who passed away in 2013. It was his wish that the Eyermann collection remain intact and be made available to a public institution for further use.

Medal on the “Feast dedicated to the at the court of Ferrara” organized by the Königliche Akademie für Grafik und Buchkunst Leipzig 1912.

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Dr. Christoph Mackert, curator of the coin collection and director of the manuscript collection at the Leipzig University Library, points out: “It is a pleasure that the medals now join the inventory that he helped build with such commitment and in which a significant void can now be filled.”

After his studies at the Leipzig Academy of Fine Arts, Bruno Eyermann started working there as a lecturer in 1919. In 1923, he started a rich production of medals as an independent artist, characterized by its exceptionally firm and realistic graphic style, which, with its orientation towards Classical Modernism and New Objectivity, went on to significantly influence even the German Democratic Republic’s medal art. Another typical feature is his experiment with different formats and materials. Eyermann seems to have always avoided coming too close to the different political systems he experienced.

 

Award for laboriousness and loyalty by the Company Gebrüder Heine in Leipzig 1922.

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Starting in October, the collection will be publicly presented as part of a new exhibition at the library: “GELDKULTURERBE. 300 Jahre Münzsammlung der UB Leipzig” on occasion of the 300th anniversary of the library’s coin collection, from 5 October 2018 until 1 January 2019. A catalog of the same name will be published at the exhibition’s opening on 4 October.

It was the collaboration of several sponsors that enabled the library to purchase the collection: the Kulturstiftung der Länder [Cultural Foundation of the German Federal States], the Ostdeutsche Sparkassenstiftung [East-German Savings Bank Foundation] together with the Sparkasse Leipzig, the Fritz Rudolf Künker GmbH & Co. KG Osnabrück as well as the Verband der Deutschen Münzenhändler e. V. [Association of German Coin Dealers]. On occasion of the 300-year anniversary of the coin collection in 2018, they not only gave the Leipzig University Library an amazing birthday gift, but also set an important basis for future scientific work on Leipzig’s artistic medals.

“Our task of cultural promotion in the 16 German federal states is fulfilled in the best way when we are able to secure locally-embedded cultural assets of national importance for the public”, emphasizes Prof. Dr. Frank Druffner, Deputy Secretary-General of the Kulturstiftung der Länder. “The collection that was so knowledgeably compiled by Klaus Thieme is a representation of design history from the late German Empire across the Weimar Republic and National Socialism up to the two German post-war states.”

“The Ostdeutsche Sparkassenstiftung and the Sparkasse Leipzig have been partners of the University of Leipzig for years. We are happy to be able to help once again and sponsor the Eyermann collection’s purchase. Leipzig and its university library are gaining a treasure. Handicraft, art and history are wonderfully combined in this. We are looking forward to the exhibition starting in October. Our tip: Make sure to visit, look at the exhibits and let yourselves be amazed”, Andreas Koch from Sparkasse Leipzig and Alexander Salomon from the Ostdeutsche Sparkassenstiftung said at the presentation.
Ulrich Künker, managing director of the Fritz Rudolf Künker GmbH & Co. KG is happy that the auction house was able to lay the foundation for the purchase: “We agree with the collector that this exceptional and extensive collection should be presented to the public in its entirety. We at the auction house and coin dealership Künker consider it both our pleasure and our task to preserve this collection of almost all Eyermann works for research as well as for the public.”

The University Library has its own website (even in English).

Recently we reported on the 300-year anniversary of the coin collection (in German only, though).