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The lowly East Ender who gave Britain one of its greatest gifts

The Gilbert Collection — one of Britain’s most prized artistic possessions — is about to go on display at the V&A.

June 25, 2009 12:25
Pieces from the Gilbert Collection, including a jewel-encrusted Torah crown

By

Julia Weiner ,

Julia Weiner

3 min read

One of the most important art collections in the country is about to be unveiled in its brand new home at the Victoria & Albert Museum. Amassed over 40 years and worth more than £100 million, the collection includes some stunning Judaica, alongside important gold and silver pieces, and Italian mosaics. And it existence is thanks to an East Ender called Abraham Bernstein.

Even the most enthusiastic art lovers might be shrugging their shoulders at this point and asking: “Who is Abraham Bernstein?” That is because Bernstein, the son of Polish-Jewish immigrants to Britain, is far better known as Sir Arthur Gilbert, the Los Angeles-based multi-millionaire businessman who, before his death in 2001, carved out a reputation as one of the world’s most important collectors of art.

He was born in Hackney in 1913, the eighth child of furrier Lazarus Bernstein and his wife Bela, who had come to London from Poland in 1897. He grew up in Golders Green and was working for a solicitor when he met his wife, the dressmaker Rosalinde Gilbert. He went into business with her and eventually took her surname, changing his first name from Abraham to Arthur. The business was so successful that in 1949, the Gilberts decided to retire and emigrated, in search of the sun to Beverly Hills, in Los Angeles. There he became a successful real estate developer.

According to consultant curator Timothy Schroder, who worked closely with Gilbert, his interest in art started as an interior design project. “He did not start with the aim of amassing an important collection. He just saw pieces of silver he liked that he bought with the aim of furnishing his house.”

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