Nederburg Auction marks 40 years

Friday, 13 June, 2014
Nederburg Auction
The annual Nederburg Auction will honour the creativity and talent of South Africa’s best winemakers on September 12 and 13, when 112 wines totalling just over 12 000 litres will be available for sale to local and international buyers.

“We are celebrating 40 years of artistry,” says Nederburg Auction business manager Dalene Steyn. “Not only is it an appropriate tribute to the endeavours of South African winemakers over the years to improve their wines, it is also an opportunity to commemorate the link between the auction’s establishment in 1975 and Edelkeur, the raison d’être for the Nederburg Auction.”

More than four decades ago, an extraordinary few weeks in the spring of 1968 set the Nederburg Auction on its course. Rain, followed by an unexpected week of sunshine and dehydrating wind set up vineyards for potential disaster as rot started running rampant through vineyards.

But throughout this time, Nederburg cellarmaster Günter Brözel sensed opportunity. He retired to his cellar to create a wine that could not exist but for this particular set of circumstances: Edelkeur. The wine that launched the Nederburg Auction.

Brözel always carefully qualifies this contribution to South African wine. First, he says, you need balance. In art, in wine, as in life and birth, only when all elements are in balance, can artists ply their craft, can great creations manifest. And such creations, he said, deserved a special sales platform – the Nederburg Auction.

Back then, four other producers shared his view and agreed to put forth their finest, their most extraordinary, to be sold on auction: Delheim, Overgaauw, Groot Constantia and Simonsig. From the start, the Auction was an expression of excellence, the very product of balance: of artistry in the vineyard, of thoughtful care in the cellar, of pure genius in marketing. In line with Brözel’s vision, it would also in years to come serve as an incentive for higher wine standards in South Africa and created a platform for the fairer distribution of rare wines.

Steyn comments: “The 2014 Nederburg Auction pays homage to the artists that over the past 40 years have continued to pursue this coveted balance. Year after year, their masterpieces have been carefully selected to represent the most collectable, and presented on a platform equally carefully maintained to be a showcase worthy of such art.”

Over time, the Nederburg Auction has grown from just five to more than a hundred top South African producers participating in what has become the yardstick for premium wine, annually attracting buyers from across the country – and indeed the world – in search of excellence. For more information and the complete list of wines visit www.nederburgauction.co.za

DID YOU KNOW?

The Nederburg Auction:

= Is recognised as one of the world’s five major wine auctions, alongside the auctions of Hospice de Beaune in France and Kloster Eberbach in Germany.

= Offers quality, fine wines that are often only available in limited quantities and not on the open market.

= Structures its lots to afford buyers the flexibility of purchasing wines according to their individual volume requirements.

= Encourages greater wine standards.

= Aims to develop an awareness of South African wine.

= Is committed to providing a credible, industry-focused platform for ensuring a fair distribution of fine, rare wines.

THEN (1975)

The Nederburg Auction’s establishment is inextricably linked with Nederburg’s signature dessert wine, Edelkeur, pioneered and created by Günter Brözel, Nederburg's cellarmaster for 33 years until his retirement in 1989.

At the first auction in 1975, the 1973 and 1974 vintages of the Nederburg Edelkeur were auctioned alongside wines from Delheim, Groot Constantia, Simonsig and Overgaauw. The average price per case achieved for the collection of 15 wines sold was R19.21.

NOW (2014)

The 2014 collection comprises of 62 red wines (8734.50 litres), 29 white wines (2542.50 litres), one semi-sweet white wine (45 litres), eight dessert wines (301.50 litres), seven fortified wines (371.25 litres) and five Ports (184.50 litres).