Isidore Spielmann

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Sir Isidore Spielmann, CMG FSA (London 21 July 1854 10 May 1925) was a British civil engineer turned art connoisseur, impresario and exhibition organizer.[1]

Isidore Spielmann was born into a Jewish family in London in 1854, the son of the banker Adam Spielmann (1812–1869), one of three brothers who had emigrated from Schokken (now Skoki), near Posen (now Poznań, following the Partitions of Poland.[2] Isidore had seven siblings, several of whom died in infancy or in young adulthood, but the two surviving brothers were equally celebrated figures: Sir Meyer Spielmann (1856–1936) was primarily concerned with education and youth-rehabilitation and was knighted in 1928, but he was also an art collector himself; Marion Spielmann (1858–1948) was the youngest and received no honours, but was a renowned art critic in his time and arguably the most influential of the three in the art world of the Edwardian era. Isidore's nephews and nieces included the women's suffrage campaigner Eva Hubback.

Isidore's own career was in civil engineering and he was awarded the CMG, before he began his second career.[3]

Art Impresario

Family life

References

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