Permanent collection

Elizabeth MBATHA "Fish" 22cm x 12cm x 16cm Ceramic Signed E. Mbatha
Mary STAINBANK 1899 -
"Zulu Dancer" (Mamatheka - Joy of Living) 44cm x 23cm x 15cm Soap Stone
Edmund Blair LEIGHTON, R.O.I.
"Maiden Reading letter 19 cm x 10 cm, Oil on board dated 1884
A piece of history
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Mrs Ann Bryant
 

She was one of five daughters of Major Joseph Leatherland of the Cape Mounted Riflemen and she was born in the year 1862. She was actually christened Elizabeth Ann but she preferred to use the name Ann.

She married Edmund Bryant in King William’s Town and she had six children all of whom are now deceased.  Her husband Edmund Bryant left the house and garden to her when he died on 24th November 1928 at the age of 77 years and she in turn left the property to the City of East London to be used as an art gallery when she died on 16th September 1946, at the age of 84 years. The last 20 years of her life she collected paintings all of which she left to the art gallery and City of East London.

Information given by Mrs.R.G.E..Bryant in letter dated 22 April 1976

The Ann Bryant Art Gallery

This elegant old house was built by E.D.U. Bowen in 1905 for Mr. Arthur Savage, father of the well-known local artist, Elaine Savage.  The estimated cost was £3000, a large sum in those days.

Mr E.A. Bryant, a well known businessman of the firm Gibberd & Bryant, bought the house in 1907 and later extended the site to include the whole block between Belgrave Road and Oxford Street. The Bryant’s were interested in art and built up a private collection mainly of paintings by British and European artists of the later part of the 18th century and of the 19th century.

Mrs. Ann Bryant survived her husband by several years and when she died, bequeathed her home, then known as "The Gables", to the City of East London as an art gallery.  She also left a valuable collection of pictures.  The gallery is now known as the Ann Bryant Art Gallery" after her.

To appreciate the elegance of the old residence, arrive at the main gate in St Luke’s Road.  The tall twin facades with their chimney topped gables lie at the culmination of a long lawn and tree-lined path.  The heavy timber door opens within an arch of stained leaded glass.  Wrapped around the sides and the back (the usual entrance) is a wooden balcony. From inside, the glass around the main door glows like an iridescent peacock tail.  The detail that was characteristic of a more relaxed but elegant bygone age lingers here still.  Note the door furniture and the ceilings.  One room has a cornice moulding with cherubs faces.  Upstairs there is a beautifully ornate mantlepiece.  The originals were removed during modernisation.  This one comes from a now-demolished house down Belgrave Road.  Also ask to see the bathroom!

The gallery opened officially to the public in 1947.  Today it houses a fine collection amongst which those of Thomas Bowler, Maud Sumner, Lawrence Scully, George Pemba, Willie Bester and Norman Catherine deserve note.  Catalogues of the permanent or special exhibitions are available from the attendant.
 

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