Utrecht Art Supply
Private | |
Industry | Fine Art Supply |
Founded | New York City, New York (1949) |
Headquarters | Brooklyn, U.S. |
Number of locations | 45 |
Website | www.UtrechtArt.com |
Utrecht Art Supply is an international art supply store chain. The chain was founded in 1949 in New York City by artist Norman Gulamerian and his brother Harold. In 2013, it was acquired by Dick Blick Art Materials which intends to gradually merge the two brands.[1]
Gulamerian Brothers
Norman and Harold Gulamerian were born in Brooklyn,NewYork. Harold Gulamerian was born in 1924 at the home of his parents who lived on 77th street in Bensonhurt. Norman Gulamerian was born at Lutheran Medical Center in 1927. Harold joined the army in 1943. As a senior at The High School of Music and Art, Norman enlisted in the Navy in 1945. After the war, Norman got his high school diploma and then went to Brooklyn College. Harold went to City College getting a degree in science and Business administration and then a law degree. When Norman got home from the service he apprenticed himself to the artist Frederick Taubes (1900-1981). He primed his canvases and ground his paint. Norman, an artist himself, was having trouble finding unprimed linen. Harold suggested they import it from Belgium. That was the start of Utrecht Art Supply. They sold their Belgian linen out of their basement in Brooklyn. The two brothers named their venture Utrecht Linens, Inc. and dedicated themselves to supplying artists with the "highest quality art materials and supplies for the best value." In 1951 they rented an office at 119 West 57th Street. In 1958 they rented factory space at Bush Terminal in Brooklyn, New York. In 1968 they opened their first retail store at 32 Third Avenue in New York City. They then opened locations in Philadelphia, Boston, Chicago, Detroit, Washington DC, Berkeley California and San Francisco. By the time they sold their business in 1997, they had grown from a small space in Bush terminal to 50,000 square feet and an additional 50,000 square feet of retail space. Norman Gulamerian is 85 years old and still paints everyday. Harold Gulamerian lived in Mill Neck on Long Island until his passing on September 5, 2012 at the age of 88. [2]
The Gulamerian brothers' artist supply business grew quickly. In 1957, they developed their revolutionary acrylic gesso for priming artist canvas. And by the end of the early 1960s they had expanded the Utrecht line to include professional-grade artist oil paints, acrylics, and watercolor supplies, sold at manufacturer-direct prices.
Locations
Utrecht Art Supply Today
Today, Utrecht still mills its own premium artist paints and gesso at the Brooklyn, NY plant. In addition to quality products, Utrecht also offers an extensive assortment of fine art materials and supplies from the leading national brands available today.
References
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