Thomas Agnew & Sons is a fine arts dealer in London that began as a print and publishing partnership between Thomas Agnew and Vittore Zanetti in Manchester in 1817. Agnew ended the partnership by taking full control of the company in 1835. The firm opened its London gallery in 1860, where it soon established itself as a leading art dealership in Mayfair. Since then, Agnew's has held a pre-eminent position in the world of Old Master paintings. It also had a major role in the massive growth of a market for contemporary British art in the late 19th century. Agnew's closed in 2013. The brand name was sold privately and the gallery is now run by Lord Anthony Crichton-Stuart, a former head of Christie's Old Master paintings department, New York.[1][2][3]
History
Agnew's, as it is commonly called, has long held a prominent position in the Bond Street trade in Old Master pictures. The founder's sons, Sir William Agnew, 1st Baronet (1825–1910) and Thomas Agnew (1827–1883), were pivotal in the firm's rise in London, where Agnew's first established itself in 1860. Broadly speaking, Sir William's line produced the in-house connoisseurs (most notably C. Morland Agnew [1855–1931]), while Thomas's son, W. Lockett Agnew (1858–1918), inherited his father's commercial flair.
It was William Agnew who shifted the gallery trade to Old Masters. As The Times noted in Sir William's obituary, "in 1877 the firm had built rooms in 39 Old Bond Street (later called 43 Old Bond Street), and when the succession of Old Master exhibitions, the example of Sir Richard Wallace and the Rothschilds, and the revived passion for eighteenth-century architecture and furniture had turned the taste of the new rich men back to the older art, William Agnew was ready to find the pictures."
In 2008, the purpose-built gallery in Old Bond Street (1877), designed by Salomons & Wornum, was sold by Agnew's to Etro, the Italian fashion house. In 2013, after nearly two centuries of family ownership, the firm was purchased privately and the new gallery relocated its premises from Albemarle Street to 6 St James's Place, London, under the directorship of art historian Lord Anthony Crichton-Stuart.[7] The Agnew family will continue as consulting participants in the firm's operation. The archive was given to the National Gallery.[8]
The new gallery presents a broad range of genres and subjects, price ranges, and periods in several different mediums, including paintings, watercolours and drawings as well as sculpture. [3] Particular attention in recent years has been paid to highlighting the work of lesser-known female artists in Western art history, such as Lotte Laserstein, whose work was the focus of an Agnew's show in 2017. [4] In 2021, the gallery ran an exhibition dedicated to Albrecht Dürer which included a newly found drawing by the artist: this previously unknown work has been subject to significant publicity. [5][6][7]
Joseph Mallord William Turner, R.A., Ostend, purchased from Agnew's in 1975 by the Neue Pinakothek, Munich.
Sir Peter Paul Rubens, Samson and Delilah, purchased by Agnew's on behalf of the Trustees of the National Gallery in 1980, The National Gallery, London.
Rembrandt van Ryn, Self Portrait in Old Age, purchased from Agnew's in 1888 by Sir E. C. Guinness, present owner: The Iveagh Bequest, Kenwood House.
Claude Monet, Terrace at Sainte-Adresse, purchased from Agnew's by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, 1967.
Jan Vermeer, The Guitar Player, purchased from Agnew's in 1889 by Sir E. C. Guinness, present owner: The Iveagh Bequest, Kenwood House.
Albrecht Dürer, Self-portrait, purchased from Agnew's in 1900 by Leopold Goldschmidt, present owner: The Louvre, Paris.
Paul Gauguin, Mata Mua - in olden times, purchased by Agnew's in 1984 on behalf of Baron Thyssen and Jaime Ortiz-Patiño, present owner: Thyssen-Bornemisza Museum.
Jacopo Carucci, called Pontormo, Portrait of a Halberdier, purchased by Agnew's on behalf of the J. Paul Getty Museum in 1989.
Josef Wright of Derby, Portrait of Colonel Charles Heathcote, oil on canvas, 127 x 100 cm, purchased from Agnew's in 2017 by The Cleveland Museum of Art.
^Chun, Dongho (2011) "Art Dealing in Nineteenth-Century England: The Case of Thomas Agnew", Horizons: The Seoul Journal of the Humanities, Vol. 2, No. 2 pp. 255-277
^[1] Antiques Trade Gazette, 10 March 2014, New owners for Agnew’s as National Gallery buy archive (Accessed October 2018)