- Source: Barakat Gallery
The Barakat Gallery is an antiquities dealership with locations in London, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, and Seoul. Barakat is considered to have one of the largest collection of ancient art for sale in the world, and one of the largest collections in private hands, at around 40,000 items with total valuation of over $1.5 billion USD according to several sources.
The galleries are currently owned by Fayez Barakat, a Palestinian-American artist and antiquities dealer. Barakat is the fifth generation of his family to run the business.
History
The gallery started informally on the Barakat family's farm land in Hebron, Palestine where the family collected antiquities from local farmers that had unearthed them in the course of their labor. The family then sold the antiquities alongside their own produce in the local market.
The modern company was founded with the opening of its first major gallery in Jerusalem in the 1950s and has since expanded to Los Angeles, London, Hong Kong, and Seoul. In 2003, the Rodeo Drive LA gallery was honored by the City of Beverly Hills for its contribution to the arts in Los Angeles.
In 2019, the Getty Museum acquired a sixteenth-century Armenian Gospel Book from the Barakat Gallery.
Major exhibitions
Beauty in the Ancient Americas: Pre-Columbian Aesthetics, Barakat Gallery Los Angeles, September 2017 to January 2018
Closer, Barakat Gallery London, February 2019 to April 2019
Bygone Empires, Barakat Gallery London, April 2019 to June 2019
Unglazed, Barakat Gallery London, June 2019 to August 2019
Islamic Masterpieces, Barakat Gallery Seoul, October 2023
Stolen Buddha
In September 2023 a $1.5M Buddha was stolen from the Barakat Gallery in Los Angeles. A single thief allegedly maneuvered the 250-pound sculpture, dating from Japan's Edo Period, out of the Barakat Gallery's backyard and into a rental truck. The ancient buddha was recovered within a week.
References
External links
Barakat Gallery Website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Daniel
- Barakat Gallery
- Saleh Barakat
- Bulla (seal)
- Chaza Charafeddine
- Tlatilco acrobat
- Meekyoung Shin
- Katya Traboulsi
- Nabil Nahas
- Bura archaeological site
- Nepal