User:Connaisseurdart/Aronson Antiquairs of Amsterdam
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Aronson Antiquairs is a prestigious antiques gallery at the Nieuwe Spiegelstraat in Amsterdam, specializing in 17th and 18th century Dutch Delftware.
History
[edit]Aronson Antiques, a traditional family business, was founded in 1881 by Leon Aronson (1830-1910), also son of an antiques dealer, in the eastern Dutch city of Arnhem. Leon’s son David (1878-1942) moved to the Dutch capital Amsterdam around 1900. During World War II, the gallery was closed and the stock was sold by a ‘Verwalter,’ an administrator appointed by the German occupier. Nico and Ab (1916-1990), both sons of David, were the only survivers after WWII and restarted the business with nothing but experience and determination.
In 1967, after a year of training with a colleague in London, Dave (1946-2007), Ab and wife Noen’s only child, joined his parents in the business. Prior to Ab’s death in 1990, Robert, son of Dave, decided also to continue in the footsteps of so many of his forebears, and after working at the head office of Sotheby’s in London for two years, he joined his father in 1992. Dave and Robert internationalized the firm rapidly, with the first overseas art fair in London in 1992 and starting to participate in The Winter Antiques Show in New York in 1994. Dave was chairman of the Executive Committee of The European Fine Art Fair (TEFAF) in Maastricht from 1999 through his passing in 2007. Although having a background as an general antiques dealer, nowadays Aronson specializes in, and is world renowned for 17th and 18th century Dutch Delftware. An annual publication on Delftware, providing art historical context, and the e-commerce platform set the standard for a modern international dealership.
The Building
[edit]In 1969 Ab and Dave moved to the present location at Nieuwe Spiegelstraat 39, which they extensively restored in 1984. The building was by chance also built in 1881, the founding date of the company. Occupying the spaces of the previous two buildings, the new owner in 1881 acquired the plots to build a ‘café.’ It is unknown though if the café was ever realized. Several years after the building was erected, it was home to a beds store. By the turn of the century the Nieuwe Spiegelstraat, named after the extremely influential Hendrik Laurensz. Spiegel (1549-1612), became the antiques district of Amsterdam, mainly due to its proximity to the newly built Rijksmuseum (1885). The most recent refurbishment in 2006 brought the gallery premisses in Amsterdam firmly into the 21st century.