Algernon Graves | |
Birth Date: | 24 February 1845 |
Birth Place: | Pall Mall, London, England |
Death Place: | Marylebone, London, England |
Burial Place: | Brompton Cemetery, |
Occupation: | Art historian, art dealer |
Algernon Graves (1845–1922) was a British art historian and art dealer, who specialised in the documentation of the exhibition and sale of works of art.[1] He created reference sources that began the modern discipline of provenance research.
Algernon Graves was born in Pall Mall, Westminster on 24 February 1845, the son of Henry Graves (1806–1892) a publisher of prints, and Mary Squire (d. 1871).[2]
Graves studied German in Bonn, Germany, before working for his father's company Henry Graves & Co., researching for catalogues that the company published.
During a period of recovery following an injury, Graves had the idea of creating a catalog of art that was exhibited in London, from his extensive lists of artists and their works that he had compiled while working on other projects.
In 1884 he published the first edition of his idea, entitled A Dictionary of Artists who have Exhibited Works in the Principal London Exhibitions from 1760 to 1880. A second edition followed in 1885 and a third in 1901. In 1899, Graves and William V. Cronin issued the first volume of their work on Sir Joshua Reynolds, which they sold by subscription. In 1900, a book on Sir Thomas Lawrence by Lord Ronald Gower included a catalogue by Graves.
When his father Henry died in 1892, Algernon took over the running of Henry Graves & Company, where he worked until he retired in 1907.
Graves married the daughter of an art dealer, John Clowes Grundy from Manchester, England and they had a son, Herbert Seymour Graves, who later assisted Graves with later editions of the Dictionary of Artists series. His son died in 1898.
Graves remarried in 1919 to Madeline Lilian Sophia Wakeling Walker.
Graves died in Marylebone on 5 February 1922, and is buried at Brompton Cemetery, London.[2]