Barbara Gladstone’s Chelsea Town House in NYC Sells for $13.1 M.

The five-bedroom Chelsea town house belonging to the late art gallerist Barbara Gladstone recently sold for $13.1 million, more than $1 million above its asking price, reports the New York Post.

The historic home at 344 W. 22nd St was listed for $11.99 million. According to the New York Post, the 19th-century brick Greek Revival row house was purchased by an unnamed buyer in an all-cash deal that closed August 27.

The brokers for the home, Scott Hustis and Mark Jovanovic of Compass, also told the New York Post that the final price was a record per square foot for a Chelsea town house.

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Her namesake gallery, Gladstone Gallery, currently has locations in New York, Brussels, Seoul, and Rome. It has amassed a roster studded with celebrated artists, including Matthew Barney, Alex Katz, Joan Jonas, Wangechi Mutu, Keith Haring, Robert Rauschenberg, Carrie Mae Weems, Arthur Jafa, and many others.

Gladstone opened her gallery in New York in 1980, and rose to become one of the city’s most notable dealers. She died in Paris in June 2024 after a brief illness at the age of 89.

Gladstone purchased the Chelsea town house in 2011 for $6.3 million. It was built in 1841. Architect Annabell Selldorf designed the current 4,395-square-foot iteration of the four-story property. Piet Oudolf designed the home’s garden.

Selldorf, who also designed two of the three New York branches of the Gladstone Gallery, added a balcony to each of the residence’s top three levels. The home also featured “gallery-like” Venetian plaster walls and white oak floors, which helped showcase works from Gladstone’s private collection.

Sotheby’s auctioned 12 pieces from that collection during a contemporary evening sale this past May, which sold for a total of $18.5 million with fees. The artists in that sale included Richard Prince, Andy Warhol, Rudolf Stingel, Mike Kelley, and Thomas Schütte. Notably, all the works were sold without guarantees, and 8 of the 12 sold above high estimates.

The New York Post also reported that another home owned by Gladstone, a Gilded Age, turn-of-the-19th-century North Fork mansion, is currently on the market for $12 million.