King and McGaw

King and McGaw
Founded 1982
Headquarters Newhaven, Sussex
Key people

Gyr King (Founder)
Marc Lickfett (CEO)

Ian Brooker (Operations Director)
Products Art Prints, Frames
Revenue Increase £6.5 million (2013)[1]
Website www.kingandmcgaw.com

King & McGaw is an art publisher and online retailer, founded in 1982. It supplies high quality art prints and products to museums, galleries and retail stores as well as art prints direct to consumers through its online retail site. Production is based in their 50,000 sq ft (4,600 m2) factory in Newhaven, Sussex.

History

The company was set up in Sussex in 1982 by three brothers Gyr, Quentin and Perry King under the name King Publishing, as a silkscreen printing company. The company designed upmarket posters for art galleries and small boutique shops. The brothers negotiated the rights to works of art by new artists and photographers, as well as established artists such as Bridget Riley, Howard Hodgkin and Terry Frost.[2]

King & McGaw Warehouse in Newhaven

The company rebranded to King Posters by the late 1980s with the business developing into other areas including framing and product development for museum shops such as the Tate, National Gallery, Louvre, Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art.[2]

In 1989 King Posters was making annual sales of £2 million but later that year a fire destroyed the warehouse and resulted in £3 million worth of stock being lost.[3] The company's bank loaned an additional £5000 so the stock could be reprinted and an American supplier, Bruce McGaw, offered to replace some of the missing stock for free, which, in turn, triggered a business deal. As a result the company was renamed in 1990 to King & McGaw.

During the 1990s, King & McGaw's focused on turning to supplying department stores with pictures and posters as well as museums and galleries resulting in partnerships with John Lewis, Next and Debenhams. As a result, sales had reached $35 million a year by the end of 2000. Further developments occurred in 2007 when the company switched to digital printing, allowing them to print-to-order.

Pop Up Shop in Soho, London

By 2011 the company to decide to expand into retail by acquiring the online retailer Easyart.com. Easyart was set up by Simon Matthews in 1999 during the dot-com boom and in 2002 faced legal allegations from Sir Stelios Haji-Ioannou, the founder of EasyJet, over its use of the easy name, accusing Easyart of “passing off” on easyGroup’s good name.[4] Easyart won the court battle when easyGroup discontinued its legal action, saying it had bigger targets to go after.[5] In March 2015 the company discontinued the Easyart brand and merged the site within the King & McGaw brand.[6]

In May 2015 King & McGaw used a pop-up shop to showcase lithographic posters from the Mourlot Studios archives on D'Arblay Street, Soho, London.[7] Contributions from artists such as Picasso, Matisse, Masson, Leger, Miro, Le Corbusier, Yves Klein, Raoul Dufy and René Magritte [8][7][9] were included in the exhibit. Classes in drawing with artist Anna-Louise Felstead and screen printing classes with Print Club London, a screen printing company based in Dalston were also held at the shop.[10]

Partnerships

King & McGaw have worked in partnership with several charitable organisations over the last couple of years. In 2013 they partnered with Art Everywhere a charitable project putting on the world's largest art exhibition, filling 22,000 billboards across the UK with art prints. The profits went to the Art Fund, which helps museums and galleries buy and show great works of art to the public.[11]

In 2014 King & McGaw distributed artwork for Do the Green Thing , a charity which encourages people to be greener in their everyday lives. All proceeds from the artwork were donated back to the charity. Later in the year, the company offered exclusive prints from the RHS Chelsea Flower Show to members of the public giving 25% of sales to the Alzheimer's Society.[12]

Licenses

The company currently holds licenses for contemporary artists such as Hormazd Narielwalla, Mario Testino, Simon C. Page, artists' estates (Andy Warhol, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring), museums (Imperial War Museum, Sir John Soane's Museum, National Railway Museum), galleries (Courtauld Gallery, The Lowry), institutions (The National Archives, Royal Horticultural Society) as well as (Penguin, Vogue, Ladybird Books).

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, April 26, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.