Thursday, October 9, 2008

Artists of Plenty Exhibition

 

Last Friday, the Artists of Plenty Calendar was launced with a two week exhibition at R.O.W Gallery in Wharf St Tauranga (New Zealand). Proceeds from the sales of works and all profits from sales of the Calendar go to Tauranga Women's Refuge. This is a great Calendar and a great cause! Please visit exhibition.net.nz for images of all works and where you can also purchase calendars. Note that if you are out of town or overseas, please let me know so I can allow extra for postage

Kind regards
Bryce Brown




Email Bryce Brown

Labels: ,

Monday, June 23, 2008

News | CELEBRATION EXHIBITION | Opened by PM Helen Clark.

 

Agape a painting by Bryce BrownThe “Celebration Exhibition” opened last Thursday and continues until 4 July.

A celebration of “success” as an artist in our community will be reflected in this exhibition. This unique exhibition brings a great sense of pride for those artists who have long-standing recognition in the Bay of Plenty region of New Zealand. The exhibition also celebrates the addition of a new location in the city of Tauranga that offers regional artists the opportunity to exhibit their art and culture.


Prime Minister Helen Clark opened the new “Creative Tauranga” office and gallery on the corner of Willow and Wharf streets. Surrounded by 25 paintings from local, Ms Clark, the Minister for Arts and Culture, said she couldn't think of any other community arts council that has combined an exhibition space.


If you are in Tauranga any time up till July 4th, please call in and enjoy these works and have a chat with the team. My work “Agape” is included in the exhibition, so you will also have the opportunity to view the piece if you haven't seen it already.


Painting Girl with a Basket of Flowers by Bryce BrownAlso, I will have the painting 'Girl with a Basket of Flowers' from my recent “Lightly on the Land” exhibition back in my studio later this week. This is one of two remaining works from the series. Please contact me if you would like to view this in my studio - or would like to be emailed a large image for viewing.


Have a great week.

Kind regards,Bryce Brown


info@brycebrownart.com

http://www.brycebrownart.com/



Ph (64+)(0)7 575 0123

Labels: , , ,

Sunday, February 24, 2008

Bryce and Catherine Brown Featured

 

Creative coupling: Catherine and Bryce BrownThe February edition of "Creative Beat" in the Bay of Plenty Times by Paul Charman featured Bryce Brown and his wife Catherine. Paul kindly gave us permission to reprint the article below.



Cafe culture meets pioneering spirit By Paul Charman
Their responsibilities force this couple to maximise each moment of creative time


Success in the arts demands a mountain of discipline and an ocean of energy. So say an emerging painter and a well known classical and modern dance school operator, who also happen to be husband and wife.

Catherine and Bryce Brown spending some time together between creative burstsThey’re Mount Maunganui identities Bryce and Catherine Brown, whose well-planned days begin with coffee and conversation at 6am and sometimes conclude - for Catherine anyway - well into the early hours of the next morning. This last eventuality is when a dance production is underway and Catherine is intent on having a quiet time to maintain creative flows at the end of a long and arduous day.


Catherine working in her vegetable garden with Bryce looking onWithin the mix of daily life the couple support, ransport and exhort four children - aged from toddler to teenager - maintain a large organic vegetable garden, market and maintain their own respective businesses, plan and organise upcoming artistic events and festivals and lobby for tax reform on behalf of small business people (who naturally include artists).

In conversation, far from showing signs of wear and tear, they are brimming with enthusiasm for the lifestyle they have chosen, claiming that working hard at what they love to do leads to a net energy gain, rather than a loss.

“Perhaps in some people’s minds artists are wafty or ethereal types who go with the flow and await inspiration before doing any work,’’ says Catherine.

Adds Bryce: “But the fact is you have to be disciplined if you are going to be an artist, look at Matisse, look at Picasso, or look at just about any of the successful Success in the arts demands a mountain of discipline and an ocean of energy. So say an emerging painter and a well known classical and modern dance school operator, who also happen to be husband and wife. They’re Mount Maunganui identities Bryce and Catherine Brown, whose well-planned days begin with coffee and conversation at 6am and sometimes.

Their responsibilities force this couple to maximise each moment of creative time and there are
quite a few of those.”

He quotes Leonardo da Vinci, to the effect that no work of any consequence is ever produced without constraints on the time of the artist.

Artist Bryce Brown in front of his Lightly on the Land paintingsThe couple agree responsibilities force them to maximise each moment of creative time that comes their way. When it comes to work stamina Bryce reckons that his wife’s far exceeds his own and says her ability to move between the roles of work and domestic life helped to inspire his latest collection of paintings, Lightly on the Land.

Bryce is arrested by the female alchemy that lets a woman care for children, work the land, take care of business, plan for the future and then make herself beautiful to meet the world once again. He sees it all in Catherine.

The former carpet layer is no stranger to hard graft himself, having been able to do a small house in a single day before a hand injury forced him to look at a career change a few years ago. A graphics course at Bay of Plenty Polytechnic gave him the basic skills and confidence to launch out on a long-held dream of becoming a painter.

Bryce grew up on lifestyle blocks around Northland, working for local farmers in the school holidays, and has long been influenced by painters such as Mexican Diego Rivera, famed for his portrayal of the working class. In little more than three years Bryce’s figures - painted in a vibrant modernist style - have begun to attract an international following.

One of his scenes of rural work was purchased by collectors working for the John Deere International fine art collection. Bryce paints from home and is on hand when the older children arrive home from school.

The couple share the house work but Catherine takes sole charge of the garden, at present producing abundant cabbages, courgettes, tomatoes, cauliflowers and herbs. Far from being a recreational interest it’s a strategic move aimed at mitigating the cash flow problems affecting even successful artists. The organic garden also provides the healthy diet necessary to maintain a demanding lifestyle.

When the children were younger do-ityourselfer Catherine used hot water from a chip heater in the back yard to wash some of the daily nappies required.

In professional life she operates The Dance House, which teaches classical ballet and the In Situ Dance Theatre Company, which takes youth on a performance journey, preparing them for stage and film work.

Catherine is proud of a family heritage that comprises artists and writers, dress makers and tradesmen. “Our generation is one in which cafe culture meets pioneering spirit. Whether the next generation of Kiwi children can carry that on is something time alone will tell.”

Creative Beat ~ February 2008 11


Contact figurative artist Bryce Brown

Labels: , , ,