Johannesburg Art Gallery. The Johannesburg Art Gallery is an art gallery in Joubert Park in the central business district of Johannesburg, South Africa.
   It is the largest gallery on the continent with a collection that is larger than that of the Iziko South African National Gallery in Cape Town. The building, which was completed in 1915, was designed by Sir Edwin Lutyens, with Robert Howden working as supervising architect, and consists of 15 exhibition halls and sculpture gardens.
   It houses collections of 17th-century Dutch paintings, 18th-and 19th-century British and European art, 19th-century South African works, a large contemporary collection of 20th-century local and international art, and a print cabinet containing works from the 15th century to the present. The initial collection was put together by Sir Hugh Lane, and exhibited in London in 1910 before being brought to South Africa.
   Florence, Lady Phillips, an art collector and wife of mining magnate Lionel Phillips, established the first gallery collection using funds donated by her husband. Lady Phillips donated her lace collection and arranged for her husband to donate seven oil paintings and a Rodin sculpture to the collection.
   Some other small water drawings that collected through various Galleries thought to be less valuable and have being sold for collecting funds during the late 1950's and 1960's. The current collection includes works by
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