Harry N. Abrams, Inc. is a book publishing company in
New York City,
New York founded in 1949 by Harry Nathan Abrams to publish high-quality art and illustrated books. Under Harry Abrams, works by
Norman Rockwell helped establish the company's reputation.
The Art of Walt Disney was highly successful and
Gnomes by
Wil Huygen and
Rien Poortvliet made the
New York Times bestseller list and has been reissued in 2006. The company became renowned for its monographic studies on contemporary artists. The
Times Mirror purchased the company in 1966, with Harry Abrams remaining at the helm. With Abram's retirement in 1979,
Paul Gottlieb (1935-2002) took over as publisher and editor-in-chief of the company, a position he held until his unexpected death in June 2002. Harry N. Abrams went on to found
Abbeville Publishing Group (Abbeville Press, Inc.) with his son, Robert Abrams.
Purchased in 1997 by La Martinière Group of Paris, France, the company also specializes in photography, design, architecture, art history, and natural history books. They have distribution agreements with high-profile businesses such as Forbes magazine book club and co-publishing arrangements with cultural institutions and museums both in the United States and Europe including the Whitney Museum of American Art and the Guggenheim Museums. The company also sells Abrams Books for Young Readers, a line of children's books, and Amulet Books, a line of middle grade and young adult novels.
In 2009 they will launch a sub-imprint called Abrams ComicArts, to be headed up by Charles Kochman. It will focus on comics, graphic novels and books that deal with comics and their creators.
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