Victorian London : Mapping the Emergence of the Modern Art Gallery

Data » Gallery List


Dutch Gallery


The Dutch Gallery opened in London as a branch of the Van Wisselingh firm of art dealers in Amsterdam [http://www.wisselingh.com/historie]. They specialized in the work of the Barbizon and Hague school painters, but also exhibited the work of contemporary British artists, including William Rothenstein, Charles Conder and Walter Sickert. 

Address: 14 Grafton Street [location in google maps]

Start Date: 1905

End Date: 1905

Other Locations:
14 Brook Street (by 1894-1904)

Continues as:
E. J. Van Wisselingh’s Gallery

Dealer: E. J. Van Wisselingh

Selected exhibitions

Pictures by French and Dutch Masters (1894) [NAL]

Paintings and Drawings by Walter Sickert and Bernhard Sickert (1895) [NAL]

First Exhibition of Original Wood Engraving (1898) [NAL]

First Exhibition of the Society of Medalists [1900?] [NAL]

Drawings and etchings by Alphonse Legros (1903) [NAL]

A selection of “Punch” drawings by the late Charles Keene (1903) [NAL]

Paintings by Charles Conder (1903) [NAL]

For more exhibitions, see: “Exhibitions associated with: Dutch Gallery”
http://www.exhibitionculture.arts.gla.ac.uk/gall_exhlist.php?gid=94
Exhibition Culture in London 1878-1908, University of Glasgow

Exhibition catalogues: National Art Library

Sources

Fletcher, Pamela and Anne Helmreich. “Selected galleries, dealers and exhibition spaces in London, 1850-1939.” In The Rise of the Modern Art Market in London, 1850-1939. Eds. Pamela Fletcher and Anne Helmreich. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2011. 300-301.

Unless otherwise noted, the documentation of a gallery’s start and end dates at a location is drawn from listings in The Year’s Art.

 


How to cite:
Pamela Fletcher and David Israel, London Gallery Project, 2007; Revised September 2012.
http://learn.bowdoin.edu/fletcher/london-gallery/

Bowdoin College