SKU: 91951024435

Großer, nummerierter Siebdruck von Erwin Heerich (1922‒2004), Ende der 50er

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Description

Großer, nummerierter Siebdruck von Erwin Heerich (1922‒2004), Ende der 50er*GRAFIK ERWIN HEERICH SIEBDRUCK KONKRETE KUNST 77 200 ISOMETRIE 1959 zum Verkauf steht eine Druckgrafik * ein groer Siebdruck * von Erwin Heerich (19222004) * auf leichtem Karton * Ende der 50er * geometrisches Motiv: mit der Hilfe der Isometrie ineinander gefgte Quadrate * unten rechts mit Bleistift handsigniert * unten links mit Bleistift nummeriert * Auflage: 77 200 * ein schner, konstruktiv konkreter Siebdruck * original * Erwin Heerich (* 29.

*GRAFIK ERWIN HEERICH SIEBDRUCK KONKRETE KUNST 77/200 ISOMETRIE 1959


zum Verkauf steht eine Druckgrafik

* ein großer Siebdruck
* von Erwin Heerich (1922‒2004)
* auf leichtem Karton
* Ende der 50er
* geometrisches Motiv: mit der Hilfe der Isometrie ineinander gefügte „Quadrate“
* unten rechts mit Bleistift handsigniert
* unten links mit Bleistift nummeriert
* Auflage: 77/200
* ein schöner, konstruktiv-konkreter Siebdruck
* original

* Erwin Heerich (* 29. November 1922 in Kassel; † 6. November 2004 in Meerbusch-Osterath) war ein deutscher Künstler. Er besuchte von 1945 bis 1950 die Staatliche Kunstakademie Düsseldorf in der Bildhauerklasse von Ewald Mataré. Von 1950 bis 1954 hatte er dort das Meisterschüleratelier zusammen mit Joseph Beuys. 1957 wurde er Assistent von Mataré in der Sommerakademie von Oskar Kokoschka in Salzburg. Ab 1959 entstanden Kartonplastiken und Zeichnungen, Drucke und Grafiken im freien Bereich isometrischer Gesetzmäßigkeit. 1961 erhielt er eine Anstellung als Lehrer am Seminar für werktätige Erziehung in Düsseldorf. Im Jahr 1968 war Heerich mit 10 Kartonplastiken auf der 4. documenta in Kassel vertreten. 1969 wurde er an die Kunstakademie Düsseldorf berufen und war dort bis zur Emeritierung 1988 Professor. Ab 1974 war Heerich Mitglied der Berliner Akademie der Künste. 1978 erhielt er für sein Schaffen den Will-Grohmann-Preis Berlin. 1980 begann er mit der Planung der Bauten auf der Museumsinsel Hombroich bei Neuss und schuf zudem zahlreiche plastische Arbeiten im öffentlichen Raum. 1987 erhielt er den Max-Beckmann-Preis der Stadt Frankfurt am Main.

Maße
* 100,1 × 65,2 cm

Zustand
* mit Lagerungsspuren: oben an der Kante entlang mittelmäßig fleckig, unten an der Kante entlang leicht fleckig, Motiv unberührt, siehe Fotos
* mit Feuchtigkeitsgeruch
* linke Ecke unten leicht geknickt, siehe Fotos
* unten mit einigen Griffknicken
* guter Gesamteindruck

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SKU: 91951024435

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4.9 ★★★★★
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Z
Verified Purchase
Z. Razieli
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Works perfectly with Macbook Air M2 - power, audio, video, sleep/wake, in clamshell mode!
My monitor has a USB-C video input that supports power delivery - so I was supposed to be able to charge my laptop with the same connection that goes to the monitor. Have had trouble finding an unpowered hub that actually supports all this without any hiccups, but according to all the specs I knew this was supposed to be possible. But this one does! Now I can connect my apple laptop to my monitor, keyboard and mouse, and run in clamshell mode or with the laptop open, and it charges, wakes from sleep, does all the things I want. It also sends audio to the monitor (as it should). And I only need one USB-C connection to my laptop to do all this. Note: I just got this hub so I don't know about longevity, and I haven't tested transfer speeds from all the ports on the hub, because that's not a big concern for me.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on March 25, 2026
L
Verified Purchase
LeeNYC
Bozeman, US
★★★★★ 5
So far, so good. It's a USB-C hub, Anker has been doing USB hubs and power supplies for many years
I've always been impressed with Anker products, and great customer service! I do feel like they are starting to abandon the Android side of things recently, and the selection of cables has declined. USB-A cables seem to be discontinued, as well as USB-B. I did have a really great CSR experience a while back. I had bought a Lithium Ion car battery jumpstarters, and had not used it for several years. I needed it one night, and the cables to connect to the battery had failed. Couldn't start my car. Even though the warranty was expired, and the product was even discontinued, they shipped me (at their cost) a replacement set of cables. Now a loyal customer.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2025
M
Verified Purchase
Mark
Whiting, US
★★★★★ 1
Poor quality junk
Poor quality. Does not work as advertised. Do not buy this junk.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2026
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Verified Purchase
J. Chin
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 3
good on 16-inch MacBookPro and ThinkPad but not 13-inch MacBookPro; intermittent USB 3.2 connections
UPDATE 2025-NOV - lowering to 3-stars: Found that only the 2nd USB-C from the right is truly USB 3.2 compliant. Using the same SSD and same USB-C 3.2 cable, only the 2nd port from the right connects at 10Gbps speeds for RTL9210B-chipset enclosure SSDs (and I have tested with 4 different ones). The other 2 ports on this Anker adapter are intermittent, sometimes they connect the SSD as USB 3.0 and sometimes it connects as USB 2.0, for the same SSDs. The odd thing (as possible workaround) is that if we use a USB-C to USB-A female adapter and then use a USB-A to USB-C cable to the same SSD, it now connects at USB 3.0 speed on any of the ports, but transfers only at 5Gbps throughput. Another annoying thing is, this Anker adapter, even after the firmware upgrade, still intermittently "sleeps" or "goes offline" and disconnects from the laptop (does this on both my MacBook and ThinkPad). It does automatically reconnect after a few seconds, but very annoying, and can possibly corrupt drives that are connected when it happens. ORIGINAL REVIEW - 4 stars: USB-C hub is fast, able to transfer 5+ Gbps to SSD. Video display quality is OK for 1440p (when it works). DisplayPort video worked on ThinkPad and 16-inch MacBookPro, but not on 13-inch MacBookPro; connecting to a USB-C connected monitor (video worked without this Anker adapter). USB-C cable length to host computer is long enough. Worth the $30 price I paid ... yes; it served the purpose of having a USB-C hub while still being able to use the USB-C port for DisplayPort video; overall good design.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2025
S
Verified Purchase
Sam
Houston, US
★★★★★ 4
Video output does not contain power — caveats and findings for Switch users to whom this may concern
The product works with some caveats, which I initially tried to resolve with an ultimately unsuccessful firmware upgrade. (Anker was responsive via email, much appreciated.) It turns out the product was working to the best of its abilities this whole time, which I will now expound upon. I expect that perhaps another 4-5 people in the world intended to use this in the ways that I did, namely with a Nintendo Switch as the source to various output devices. If you are one of these people who are interested in reading my experience connecting this hub with a Nintendo Switch, my findings are below (after a brief primer). A Brief Primer 1. As you know, the Nintendo Switch can be coaxed to output Dp-Alt video if you can satisify a 39W+ handshake (15V, 2.6A or higher) 2. There are other adapters that will do this and output the video (with ample power) over USB-C, which are useful for powering AR glasses, portable monitors, or desktop USB-C monitors. 3. The limitation of a USB-C Dp-Alt adapter is that it does not also provide USB data ports like the Switch Dock itself, while many USB-C to HDMI dongles include USB-A ports. (But we don't want HDMI out, of course, because using USB-C we can power AR glasses or a portable monitor and send the video signal with one cable.) 4. I surmised that, by chaining a USB-C Dp Alt Adapter to this one (Anker A8340), I could have video output and three USB-C ports. Why do I want USB-C data ports? Since you are like me, you already know it is so I can connect a UAC1 DAC to output USB Audio and power thirsty headphones via a 4.4mm Pentacon balanced headphone jack. I also don't need to convince you of the merits of this versus using the Switch's built in 3.5mm headphone jack. Or say, connecting a wired controller because I don't care for input latency if I can avoid it. My Findings 1. This hub can indeed be chained to a USB-C Dp-Alt adapter and pass through a video signal while also leaving three USB 3.2 data ports for wired devices (yes!) 2. However, as other reviews kindly mention, the video signal outputted by the A8340 does not contain power of any sort. So, if you are intending to plug this into a desktop USB-C monitor which already has/doesn't need power, then everything is awesome. 3. If you are trying to power AR glasses, this won't work unless you add a second USB-C DP-Alt adapter after it, and provide power that way. If you intend to convert the video signal to HDMI or DisplayPort via a USB-C to HDMI or DP cable, these won't work because there is no power for the inline conversion. 4. If you are using a USB-C travel monitor, this will work provided you directly power the monitor via its second USB-C power (if it has one). So in summation, it's possible to get what you want, though you may find the victory pyrrhic. The perfect adapter (which I had hope this was, and may yet exist at a higher price point) basically takes a USB-C Dp-Alt adapter, adds USB-C data ports, and outputs USB-C + power to power AR glasses or a travel monitor. This device nevertheless has its uses, such as the ability to connect multiple USB-C devices to the Switch in handheld mode and charge it, too.
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Reviewed in the United States on January 30, 2025

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