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The defunct Marlborough Gallery

The defunct Marlborough Gallery
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The uptown branch of Marlborough Gallery in New York represented the gallery’s longstanding commitment to presenting museum-quality modern and contemporary art within Manhattan’s established cultural landscape. Founded in London in 1946 and later expanding to New York, Marlborough became one of the most influential international galleries of the postwar era, exhibiting artists such as Francis Bacon, Henry Moore, and Paula Rego. Its New York presence helped bridge European and American art markets, attracting collectors, curators, and scholars with ambitious exhibitions and a distinguished roster of artists. In its uptown years, Marlborough Gallery offered a more traditional and intimate viewing experience than many of the large industrial spaces that later came to define Chelsea. The gallery played a significant role in shaping New York’s cultural scene, balancing historical scholarship with contemporary relevance. Over the decades, Marlborough earned a reputation as a blue-chip institution whose exhibitions contributed to critical discussions of modern art, leaving a lasting legacy before the organization announced the winding down of its global operations in 2024 after nearly eight decades of activity.

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