Arthur Gilbert (real estate developer)

Sir Arthur Gilbert
Born Abraham Bernstein
May 16, 1913
London, England
Died September 2, 2001
Beverly Hills, California
Cause of death Heart attack
Nationality British, American
Occupation Real estate developer, art collector, philanthropist
Known for Gilbert Collection
Spouse(s) Rosalinde Gilbert
Marjorie Haworth
Children Colin Gilbert
Parent(s) Lazarus Bernstein
Bella Bernstein

Sir Arthur Gilbert (born Abraham Bernstein; May 16, 1913 – September 2, 2001) was a British-born American real estate developer, art collector and philanthropist.

Early life

Arthur Gilbert was born as Abraham Bernstein on May 16, 1913 in Hackney, London.[1][2] He grew up in Golders Green, London.[3][4]

His father was Lazarus Bernstein, a furrier, and his mother was named Bella.[2] His parents were Jewish Polish immigrants who had moved to London in 1897,[1][4] and they also owned land and built a house in Rishon LeZion.[3] He and his parents attended the dedication ceremony of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem in 1925.[3]

He was educated at boarding school from the age of four.[2]

Career

Gilbert was a successful businessman in England, selling gowns designed by his first wife.[2][3] He immigrated to the United States to obviate taxes in 1949.[2] Once in the Los Angeles area, he became a real estate developer.[4] He developed industrial sites under the name of the Gilbert Financial Corporation.[4]

Philanthropy

Gilbert served on the Board of Trustees of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA).[5] He loaned a large collection of objets d'art to the Museum from the 1970s to the mid-1990s.[2][5][6] He discontinued the agreement due to limited space at the LACMA.[2]

In 1996, Gilbert took back the collection of "gold, silver, mosaics, gold boxes and enamel portrait miniatures", worth about US $300 million, and donated it to the British nation.[2][7] Jacob Rothschild, 4th Baron Rothschild, the Chairman of the Heritage Lottery Fund, agreed to build a US$30 million gallery inside Somerset House to display the collection and attract visitors.[2] The new gallery was dedicated by Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother in 2001.[2] The Gilbert Collection stayed there from 2001 to 2008.[7] It can now be viewed at the Victoria & Albert Museum.[7][8]

Additionally, Gilbert supported Jewish charitable causes in Europe and Israel. He made charitable contributions to the February 1941 Foundation, a non-profit organization which honors Dutch people who helped Jews escape from Nazi barbarism during World War II.[2] In Israel, he was the founder of the Arthur and Rosalinde Gilbert Center for the Advancement of Scientific Research and made donations to erect buildings on the campus of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.[2] He also made charitable contributions to the Technion – Israel Institute of Technology in Haifa.[3]

He was knighted by Queen Elizabeth II in 1999.[4][9]

Personal life

He married Rosalinde Gilbert, a dress designer, in 1934, and took her surname.[2] They had a son, Colin.[2] After Rosalinde died in 1995, he married Marjorie Haworth in 1997.[4] They resided in Beverly Hills, California.[5] He became a naturalised American citizen.[9]

Colin Gilbert, his only son, was briefly married to Sunny Patterson of Boulder, Colorado. Together, the couple had an only daughter and Sir Arthur's only granddaughter, Windy Lee Gilbert. Windy married Boulder native Terrence P. Gallagher Jr. in Boulder in 1981. Terry and Windy have three boys, Patrick Ryan Gallagher, Keelan Gilbert Gallagher and Colin Arthur Gilbert, Sir Arthur's great grandchildren and the only generation to carry on the lineage and legacy of the Gilbert name. Patrick, the eldest, has a son Jackson Ryan Gallagher who was born in 2005.

Death and legacy

Gilbert died of a heart attack on September 2, 2001, at his private residence in Beverly Hills, California.[5] He was eighty-eight years old.[4]

The Rosalinde and Arthur Gilbert Foundation is an active philanthropic organization.[10] For example, it donated US$6 million to the Younes and Soraya Israel Studies Center at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) in 2006.[11]

References

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