Eric Estorick (1913-1993) was an American sociologist and
writer who began to collect works of art when he came to live in England
after the Second World War. Born in Brooklyn, Estorick studied at New
York University during the early 1930s. It was there that he discovered
The Gallery of Living Art in Washington Square College, a remarkable
collection containing masterpieces by Picasso, Léger, Miró and Matisse
which was to inspire him to become a collector himself. (All text and photos courtesy The Estorick Collection)

In 1941, after teaching sociology at New York University for two
years, Estorick published the first of his two biographies of Sir
Stafford Cripps, then Britain's ambassador in Moscow and later
Chancellor of the Exchequer. His research was to bring him into contact
with many leading politicians of the day, such as Churchill, Eden and
Bevan. Estorick visited Europe in 1946 to complete work on the second
biography and it was at this time that he began to buy drawings by
artists such as Picasso, Gris, Léger and Braque.
Returning to New York on the Queen Elizabeth, following another
visit to Europe in 1947, he met Salome Dessau and by the end of the
voyage they were engaged. Salome (1920-89) was the daughter of a textile
manufacturer who had left Leipzig in 1932 and settled in Nottingham,
where she and Eric were married in October 1947.
During their honeymoon in Switzerland Estorick discovered Umberto
Boccioni's book Futurist Painting and Sculpture (1914) which marked the
beginning of his passion for Italian art. Before returning to England
the newlyweds visited the studio of the erstwhile Futurist Mario Sironi
in Milan, where Estorick bought 'hundreds and hundreds of drawings and
as many pictures as I could get into my Packard Convertible Roadster'.

The couple traveled to Italy on many occasions during the late
1940s and 1950s, meeting and befriending major artists of the day,
including Massimo Campigli and Zoran Music. Their collection of Italian
art took shape between 1953 and 1958 and was shown in a series of major
public exhibitions between 1954 and 1960, both in Britain and abroad,
including one at the Tate Gallery in 1956. Around this time Estorick
became a full-time art dealer and acted as a representative for a number
of Hollywood clients in the London auction rooms, including Lauren
Bacall, Burt Lancaster and Billy Wilder. In 1960 he founded the
Grosvenor Gallery in London.

The Tate Gallery requested a long-term loan of key works which
lasted from 1966 until 1975, when the Estoricks withdrew their pictures
and went to live in Barbados. In 1968 the Italian Republic conferred the
title of Cavaliere on Estorick, followed in 1970 by the higher honour
of Commendatore for his services in promoting Italian art. In 1979 the
Italian government showed interest in purchasing the collection but the
family refused this offer, along with others from museums in the United
States and Israel. Six months prior to his death Estorick set up the
Eric and Salome Estorick Foundation, to which he donated all his Italian
works. A Georgian house at 39a Canonbury Square, Islington, was
purchased in 1994 and refurbished with a substantial grant from the
Heritage Lottery Fund to house the collection, art library, café and
shop.