Installation photograph, Alexander Calder, Buchholz Gallery/Curt Valentin, New York, 1947
Photograph by Adolph Studly © Adolph Studly

1945 Exhibit Catalogue ‘Buchholz Gallery/ Curt Valentin, New York

1945 Exhibition Catalog; ‘Contemporary Prints. December 4-29, 1945. Buchholz Gallery, Curt Valentin. 32 East 57th Street. New York’. Measures 4.75 x 6.75 inches. 

 

Contemporary Prints. Buchholz Gallery Curt Valentin, December 4-29, 1945. Exhibition 32 East 57th Street New York. Matisse, Laurens, E. L. Kirchner, Braque, Picasso, Lipchitz, Hayter, Miró, Klee, Rouault, Masson, Beckmann, Villon, Chagall, Nolde, Matisse, Maillol, Munch, Lehmbruch, Feininger, Kollwitz.Stapled illustrated wraps ; light handling wear else good + approx 7 inches x 5 inches ; 12 pages including front and back cover ; 21 black and white illustrations of works,Catalog with illustrations by European Printmakers Matisse, Laurens, E.L. Kirchner, Braque, Picasso, Lipchitz, Hayter, Miró, Klee, Rouault, Masson, Beckmann, Villon, Chagall, Nolde, Matisse, Maillol, Munch, Lehmbruch, Feininger, Kollwitz. 

 

Asking $75. 

 

Curt Valentin Gallery (New York, N.Y.)

 
 
role Dealer/Gallery
dates 1937-1955
city New York City
state NY
sex n/a
historical notes Curt Valentin was born in Hamburg, Germany, in 1902. After completing his education, he became a dealer in modern art in Berlin.

In 1934 he returned to Hamburg and worked in the Buchholz Gallery, owned by Karl Buchholz. This gallery comprised two businesses: a bookstore in the front, and, in the rear, an art gallery devoted to the modern art classified as “degenerate” by the Nazis.

In 1937 Valentin emigrated to the U.S. with a sufficient number of modern German paintings to open a gallery under the Buchholz name in New York City. In 1951 the gallery was renamed the Curt Valentin Gallery.

Widely respected as one of the most astute dealers in modern art, Valentin organized influential exhibitions and attracted major artists to his gallery. His enthusiasm for sculpture is revealed by the artists and exhibitions he selected. He also published several distinguished, limited-edition books in which the writings of poets and novelists were illustrated by a contemporary artists.
Valentin died of a heart attack in Aug. 1954, while visiting Marino Marini in Italy. One year later the gallery was liquidated and some of the work from it was sold at a Parke-Bernet auction in Nov. 1955. Several of Valentin’s artists, as well as his assistant, Jane Wade, joined the Otto Gerson Gallery, which, after Gerson’s death in 1962, became the Marlborough-Gerson Gallery.

 

Research of Curt Valentin:

https://www2.archivists.org/sites/all/files/MASNewsLetter_Summer2022.pdf

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