Everett Bernard Ellin (1928–2011) was an American museum official, art dealer, engineer, lawyer, and talent agent.
[1] He served in the Air Force during the Korean War, with duties that included drafting regulations regarding technological obsolescence.
[2][3] After leaving the Air Force, he worked for a time as a lawyer, serving as a law clerk with the California Supreme Court and as in-house counsel at Columbia Pictures.
[3] Ellin returned to Los Angeles and reopened his gallery on Sunset Boulevard in 1960, where it remained until 1963.
[2] The gallery hosted an exhibition of work by Niki de Saint-Phalle and Jean Tinguely in March 1962, along with the first American Action de Tir by Saint-Phalle in an alley off the Sunset Strip.