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Gow Langsford Gallery


Gow Langsford Gallery in Auckland, New Zealand, was established in 1987 by John Gow and Gary Langsford. Although Gow Langsford Gallery is often associated with John Leech Gallery, which origins can be traced back to the mid-19th century, the former was created as a separate venture and with a different purpose in mind.

On 3 August 1855, John Leech ran an advertising in the Southern Cross newspaper which read as follows:

By 17 March 1860, an advertisement in The New Zealander says that John Leech had moved premises to ‘Opposite the Old Fellows’ Hall, Queen St. By 1866, the business was trading in Wellesley Street between Albert and Elliott Street. However, in October 1866, “Mr Leech was able to make a bold move up the hill to the “Golden Mile” of Shortland Street where he settled down with his family. The firm John Leech occupied these premises for more than eighty years. During this time in Shortland Street, the business displayed works in its window by artists such as Gustav von Tempsky, Alfred Sharpe, John Barr Clark Hoyte and Charles Frederick Goldie, to mention but a few well known 19th and early 20th century artists. John Leech died in 1879 where upon the business continued under his son Harold who was also known as John, until his death in 1945, aged 87.

Allan Swinton joined the firm in 1946, and in 1959 bought the business. During this time, the business moved to new premises on Lorne St. The space was composed of two galleries: one for the display of reproductions and another for the display of original works. Around this period, artists such as Michael Smither, Jan Nigro, and Garth Tapper were among the many that joined the Gallery. On 24 October 1973, the New Zealand Herald ran a story written by T.J. McNamara "New home for gallery" reviewing the new gallery space: “The spacious new premises of the John Leech Gallery, in Albert St, were opened by the deputy mayor of Auckland, Dr R.H.L. Ferguson last night”… and so began another era of John Leech gallery at 106 Albert Street.

A circuit of galleries developed in the area which Hamish Keith described in the New Zealand Herald on 24 October 1973: “The new John Leech Gallery is only a step away from the Lincoln Gallery, Barry Letts and New Vision, which turns the area into something close to Auckland’s own Bond Street.” Allan Swinton continued to run the business and eventually sold it to Mr Hooker in 1975. Although the shift in ownership had a negative impact on the business, the new joint venture between the art collectors, Murray and Bev Gow and a picture framer named Bill Hart in 1977, the gallery reverted to its original aim of exhibiting artists and offering framing services. As a result, the business began to flourish once again.


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