Payments must be complete whitin a week after auction, a fee of 5% will be added to late payments.
All items sells as they are and described according to the auction house knowledge! buyer of items does so as if he saw the items with his own eyes in an early preview! The photographs set in any case before the items description.
Shippments are only possible through the Israel Post!
Registered mail prices:
Up to 2 kilo at a cost of 20 NIS
2-5 Kilo for 25 NIS.
5-10 kilo cost 30 NIS
10-20 kilo cost 35 NIS
Courier delivery in the costs of 55 NIS regardless of weight up to 20 kg.
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.
LOT 953:
Dance lessons Pleasure, by Hans Guth, illustrations Rico Blass, British Mandate, 39 pages, hard cover, original ...
more...
|
|
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() |
Sold for: $50
Price including buyer’s premium:
$
60.75
Start price:
$
50
Buyer's Premium: 21.5%
More details
VAT: 18%
On commission only
Users from foreign countries may be exempted from tax payments, according to the relevant tax regulations
|
Dance lessons Pleasure, by Hans Guth, illustrations Rico Blass, British Mandate, 39 pages, hard cover, original paper cover, 21x16.5 cm In fair condition: DJ: Tears and wear mainly on edges, inside: in good condition: Reserved.
Hans Guth was German and came from Frankkop, Germany. He was a Jew on his mother's side, but when the Nazis came to power, the young Hans Guth confronted a Nazi and therefore had to flee. In 1956, before the First Sinai War, Hans decided to leave Israel because he was a man who hated wars and returned to Germany where he established a dance school and worked there until his dying day.
He opened his dance school in Eretz Yisrael on Ben Yehuda Street on the second floor of the corner house of Mandali Street.
To tell the truth Hans Guth had medals of German schools and he certainly knew the syllabus of the learners in those years. One of his students was the poet Natan Zach, who also wrote a play about his experience at the Yekke dance and education school he received at home.

