Difference between revisions of "Sydney Burney"

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| honorific_suffix  = CBE
 
| honorific_suffix  = CBE
 
| image              = File:Burney,_Sydney.jpg
 
| image              = File:Burney,_Sydney.jpg
| birth_date        =  
+
| birth_date        = 1878
| death_date        =  
+
| death_date        = 1951
 
| address            = 4 Bruton Street, Bond Street, W1 [1937]
 
| address            = 4 Bruton Street, Bond Street, W1 [1937]
| occupation        =  
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| occupation        = dealer
 
| elected_ESL        =  
 
| elected_ESL        =  
 
| elected_ASL        =  
 
| elected_ASL        =  
| elected_AI        = 1936
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| elected_AI        = 1936.06.23
 
| elected_APS        =  
 
| elected_APS        =  
 
| elected_LAS        =  
 
| elected_LAS        =  
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=== House Notes ===
 
=== House Notes ===
 
+
1936.06.23 nominated and elected forthwith
 
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
 
=== Notes From Elsewhere ===
 
+
Sydney Bernard Burney CBE (20 March 1878[1] – 3 January 1951)[2] was a British art and antiquities dealer and collector based in London.[3] He was responsible for organizing an exhibition of African art in 1933[4] in which African art was depicted as equal to the art of other cultures.[5] He donated a limestone Etruscan urn to the British Museum.[6]<br />Burney owned the crystal skull, later known as the Mitchell-Hedges skull, which was later sold by his son at auction at Sotheby's.[7] He sold an artifact known as the Burney Relief, later called "Queen of the Night," when it was acquired by the British Museum in 2003. The authenticity of this artifact has been questioned on stylistic grounds.[8]
 
== Publications ==
 
== Publications ==
 
=== External Publications ===
 
=== External Publications ===
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== Related Material Details ==
 
== Related Material Details ==
 
=== RAI Material ===
 
=== RAI Material ===
 
+
photos
 
=== Other Material ===
 
=== Other Material ===
 +
BM

Revision as of 23:18, 28 May 2020

Sydney Burney
CBE
File:Burney, Sydney.jpg
Born 1878
Died 1951
Residence 4 Bruton Street, Bond Street, W1 [1937]
Occupation dealer
Society Membership
membership ordinary fellow
elected_AI 1936.06.23




Notes

Office Notes

House Notes

1936.06.23 nominated and elected forthwith

Notes From Elsewhere

Sydney Bernard Burney CBE (20 March 1878[1] – 3 January 1951)[2] was a British art and antiquities dealer and collector based in London.[3] He was responsible for organizing an exhibition of African art in 1933[4] in which African art was depicted as equal to the art of other cultures.[5] He donated a limestone Etruscan urn to the British Museum.[6]
Burney owned the crystal skull, later known as the Mitchell-Hedges skull, which was later sold by his son at auction at Sotheby's.[7] He sold an artifact known as the Burney Relief, later called "Queen of the Night," when it was acquired by the British Museum in 2003. The authenticity of this artifact has been questioned on stylistic grounds.[8]

Publications

External Publications

House Publications

Related Material Details

RAI Material

photos

Other Material

BM