After selling his very successful French Gallery to Henry Wallis in 1867, Ernest Gambart opened the Lefevre Gallery along with his nephew Léon Lefèvre and F. G. Pilgeram (Maas, 208) Gambart retired in 1870, leaving the other two men as partners in the business. After Lefèvre’s death in 1915, the business passed to his son Ernest Albert. For the later history of the business, see Fletcher and Helmreich, 307.
Address: 1A King-street
Start Date: 1867
End Date: at least 1914 [at least 1943]*
Other Locations:
131 New Bond Street (1944-1950)
30 Bruton Street (1950-2002)
Dealers
Ernest Gambart (wikipedia entry)
F.G. Pilgeram
Léon Lefèvre
Ernest Albert Lefèvre
Selected exhibitions
Recent work of Mdlle. Rosa Bonheur (1881) [TYA 1882, 50]
Modern Pictures and Water-Colours and Rosa Bonheur’s Lord of the Herd (1884) [TYA 1885, 62]
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. 307.
Maas, Jeremy. Gambart: Prince of the Victorian Art World. London: Barrie & Jenkins, 1975.