Overview
- ZDF added an on‑screen notice clarifying the Günther Uecker segment was recorded before the artist’s death, as his 1975 lithograph sold for €1,100 after a €950–1,100 appraisal.
- Dealers again paid above estimates: a Louis Schopper paper tensile tester valued at €250–350 went for €440 to Benjamin Leo, and Fabian Kahl spent €1,350 on two Murano lamps estimated at €600–800.
- A rare early artwork by BAP frontman Wolfgang Niedecken drew debate in the Händlerraum and ultimately sold for €2,000 to David Suppes.
- Tensions over pricing led several sellers to leave without a deal, including Irene Stahmann after a top offer of €300 for her silver set and the Hornig couple who exited when their Meissen figures were valued at €2,800–3,100 versus a €12,000 ask.
- Provenance and authenticity remained pivotal, with a Borussia Dortmund trophy identified as a later reproduction now linked to the Borusseum and a faux pharmacy device exposed by experts, as the show’s cultural reach extended to Jan Böhmermann’s auction where dealer Waldi bid €3,000.