Docks and Boats by Cottages, circa 1950-1955 by Grace Borgenicht Brandt (NYC Art Dealer)
Docks and Boats by Cottages, circa 1950-1955 by Grace Borgenicht Brandt (NYC Art Dealer)
Grace Borgenicht Brandt (American, 1915-2001)
Signed: G. Borgenicht
" Docks & Boats by Cottages " circa 1950-1955
Oil on canvas
20" x 24"
Housed in a Vintage 4" Ornamented Frame with a 1 1/2" Linen Liner and a 1/4 Golf Fillet
Overall Size: 32" x 35 3/4"
A nice presentation in very good original condition, ready to be hung and enjoyed.
Brandt was born Grace Lubell on January 25, 1915, as one of five children to a Jewish family in New York City. Her parents, Jeanette Lillian Salny and Samuel L. Lubell (born Samuel Lazarus Lubelsky), were both from Suwałki Governorate, Congress Poland. Samuel founded the Bell Oil and Gas Company, an independent oil refiner in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Lubell Brothers, a shirt manufacturer in New York City. Her siblings include oil executive Benedict I. Lubell and Shirley Black Kash (formerly married to Eli M. Black).
She attended Calhoun School and the New College at Columbia University. In 1934, while still a student, she studied in the studio of the painter André L'Hote in Paris. After returning to New York, she studied printmaking at Stanley William Hayter's Atelier 17 and earned an M.A. in art education from Columbia.
After school, she painted professionally, having her first solo show at Chris Ritter's Laurel Gallery in 1947, and later became one of Ritter's primary financial backers. After Ritter closed the Laurel Gallery in 1950, Brandt opened her own gallery, The Grace Borgenicht Gallery, in May 1951. Her gallery focused on living American artists, including Milton Avery, Ilya Bolotowsky, Jimmy Ernst, Wolf Kahn, Gabor Peterdi, Leonard Baskin, Edward Corbett, and Ralston Crawford. She represented Avery until his death in 1965 and also represented Gertrude Greene, José de Rivera, Adja Yunkers, James Brooks, and Roy Gussow. In 1995, she closed her gallery.
Although known as an art dealer, she continued to paint and showed her work in the 1954 Whitney Annual and had a solo show at the Martha Jackson Gallery in 1955.



