Founder | Franz Kleinberger |
---|---|
Dissolved | 1973 |
Headquarters | Paris and New York City |
CEO | Harry Sperling |
F. Kleinberger Galleries was a commercial art gallery based in Paris and New York that for more than a century played an important role in importing European artworks into the United States. Founded in 1848 by Franz Kleinberger in Paris, it was owned and managed by his grandson Harry Sperling until the art dealership closed in 1973. [1]
Franz Kleinberger founded the art dealership in 1848 in Paris. Its main business was importing European paintings to the United States. By 1913, Kleinberger had a New York branch gallery on Fifth Avenue, near the Duveen Gallery [1] where numerous exhibitions were organised. [2] [3] [4] [5] Art experts who worked for Kleinberger Galleries included John Watson. [6]
Harry S. Sperling (d. 1971) was vice president of Kleinberger until 1973 when he became president following the death of the founder Franz Kleinberger (ca. 1936). [7] Kleinberger Galleries worked in close partnership with Julius Böhler both before and after World War II. [8] [1] The French branch of Kleinberger was run by Alan Loebl, a cousin of Harry Sperling. [9]
Kleinberger was a major suppier of European artworks to American museums. [9] The Museum of Fine Arts in Boston holds a dozen artworks that passed through Kleinberger. [10] The National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. list twenty [11] and the Metropolitan Museum lists over 200 artworks associated with Kleinberger. [12]
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Franz Kleinberger was a European art dealer. He set up a gallery called F. Kleinberger Galleries at 9 Rue de l’Échelle in Paris, either in January, 1883, or on February 15, 1883, principally involved in selling to US buyers. The year 1848 appears too, but must be wrong, since he was born in 1858. Here is the source for the obviously wrong year of opening his gallery in Paris. By 1913, according another source after the First World War, he had set up a gallery on lower Fifth Avenue in New York, near the Duveen Gallery. Harry S. Sperling took over as the firm's president after Kleinberger's death 1937.
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