fbpx
Wikipedia

Peter Bray Gallery

Peter Bray Gallery (a commercial gallery) was established as Stanley Coe Gallery in 1949 before being renamed in 1951, after a change of management. Situated at 435 Bourke Street, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, it closed in 1957.[1] Many of the major names in mid-century Australian contemporary art showed there during its brief, but very busy, lifespan.

Peter Bray Gallery
General information
Location435 Bourke Street, Melbourne
Coordinates37°48′54″S 144°57′40″E / 37.8151277°S 144.961052°E / -37.8151277; 144.961052

Directors edit

The director/curators were Helen Ogilvie (from 1949 to 1955) and Ruth McNicoll (from Sept 1956 to close). The gallery was owned by Peter Bray,[2] whose interest was in exhibiting pictures and retailing contemporary furniture by Grant Featherston, as it was not unusual in the 1950s to combine the two retail lines into the one establishment[3]

Artists edit

 
Gordon De Lisle, Couple photographed at exhibition opening at Stanley Coe Gallery, 4 December 1950
 
Brita Sievers with her ceramics and paintings by Elma Amor at Peter Bray Art Gallery, Bourke Street, Melbourne, Victoria, 1957. Photo: Wolfgang Sievers and Peter Bray Gallery. From the State Library of Victoria.

Originally Stanley Coe Gallery, established in 1949, and taken over by Peter Bray the following year,[4] Peter Bray Gallery showed Australian paintings, sculpture and prints by significant contemporary artists.[5]

Printmaker/painter Helen Ogilvie (1902–1993) was a generous mentor of emerging artists,[6] and in 1949 Stanley Coe appointed her as one of Australia's first women gallery directors to create a commercial exhibition space on the upper floor of his interior design shop at 435 Bourke Street, Melbourne,[7][8] decorated with pale grey-blue walls and hair-cord carpet.[9] Artist Tate Adams dubbed it "the lone beacon in town for contempoary art."[10] For the period until 1955, and with advice from her friends Ursula Hoff, Arnold Shore and Alan McCulloch, she organised a program of exhibitions of the avant-garde;[6][11][12] John Brack who first exhibited there 27 October – November 1953, again in 1955,[13] then first showed his Racecourse series 5–15 November 1956 and in the same year the gallery sold his most famous work Collins Street, 5 pm to the National Gallery of Victoria.[14]

Also exhibited there were Margo Lewers, Ian Fairweather (23 April – 3 May 1956), Leonard French (who showed his Illiad series, amongst his earliest experiments with enamel house paint on Masonite, October 1952),[15] Inge King,[16] Arthur Boyd (15–24 September 1953), Charles Blackman, Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack (whose first Australian show in a commercial gallery was there in 1953), Helen Maudsley, Sydney Nolan,[17] Clifton Pugh,[18] Michael Shannon, Guy Grey-Smith,[19] David Dalgarno, Ian Armstrong and others.[20]

 
"Collins Street was exhibited at the same gallery in March 1956 and was immediately purchased by the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV)."[21]

Charles Blackman unveiled his radical series of schoolgirl paintings at the Peter Bray Gallery in May 1953, establishing his reputation in a decade in which he invented the themes that defined his career. Abstract sculptor Lenton Parr, returning to the country after working as assistant to Henry Moore, held his first Australian exhibition at the gallery in 1957, the same year that Arthur Boyd showed his figurative ceramic sculptures there.[22] Ogilvie, Modernist printmaker, painter and craftsperson in her own right, was engaged with the Crafts Revival of the 1950s and 60s, and made a living designing cutting edge lampshades in London for a period.

Exhibitions edit

 
Commercially printed lithographic poster by David Dalgarno for a group exhibition of prints by Melbourne artists, Peter Bray Gallery in 1956.

Exhibitions at the gallery turned around regularly and were only a week or week-and-a-half in duration. Interspersed with the one-person shows mentioned above were group shows by artists in a particular medium, or by artist groups and societies.[23]

  • 1951, from 1 November: Inge King, Grahame King
  • 1952, April: Francis Lymburner[24][25]
  • 1952, 22 Apr–1 May: Phyl Waterhouse, European and Indian landscapes[26]
  • 1952, from 2 May: Allan David[27]
  • 1952, 12 May: Paintings and drawings by Charles Blackman.
  • 1952, October: Len French
  • 1952, October: Inge King Constructions in Steel, Graham King, paintings[28]
  • 1953: John Rogers paintings
  • 1953, 1 February: Multi-artist exhibition, including season. Roger Kemp, Charles Blackman and Leonard French[29]
  • 1953: 23 June – 1 July: Drought paintings by Sidney Nolan.
  • 1953 Paintings by Eric Smith
  • 1953: Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack.
  • 1953, 15–24 September: Arthur Boyd
  • 1953, 27 October – 5 November: Paintings and Drawings by John Brack.
  • 1953 Paintings by artists living in Melbourne, Charles Blackman, Arthur Boyd, John Brack, Dorothy Braund, Leonard French, Roger Kemp, Graeme King, Michael Shannon, Eric Thake, Alan Warren.
  • 1954: Margo Lewers
  • 1954: Painting by the Adelaide 1954 Group, Michael Brous, Pamel Cleland, Ludvik Dutkiewicz, Wladyslaw Dutkiewicz, Ivor Francis, Jacqueline Hick, I. Rapotec, Douglas Roberts, Barbara Robertson, Francis Roy Thompson, Mervyn Ashmore Smith.
  • 1954, 1 February: Nine artists. Prints
  • 1955: 40 prints by ten artists. Tate Adams, Geoff Barwell, Barbara Brash, David Allen, Walter Gherdin, F. Higgs, Kenneth Hood, Kenneth Jack, Jennifer Purnell, Harry Rosengrave.
  • 1955: 8 March – 17 March: John Brack.
  • 1955, 20 May – 20 June: Thirty-six prints by twelve Melbourne artists. Travelling
  • 1955, June: Margaret Bembina, Eric Smith, Charles Blackman, Clifton Pugh[18]
  • 1956: Drawings and Prints - Melbourne contemporary artists. Dorothy Baker, George Bell, Barbara Brash, R.A. Center, William (Bill) Coleman, Dorothea Francis, Madge Freeman, Alan Foulkes, Ann Graham, Geoff Jones, Roger Kemp, Lesley Lawson, M.E. Lormer, Harry R. Mitchell, Anne Montgomery, Marjorie North, Harry Rosengrave, Ellen Rubbo, Richard Scales, D.K. Stoner, Eveline Syme, Elvrida M Verco, Percy Watson, Marjorie Woolcock.
  • 1956, 23 April – 3 May: Ian Fairweather
  • 1956, 6–16 June: Guy Grey-Smith[19]
  • 1956 Helen Maudsley
  • 1956 Arthur Boyd, paintings and David and Hermia Boyd ceramics
  • 1956: Karin Schepers and Udo Sellbach
  • 1956, 25 September – 1 November: Prints by the Melbourne Graphic Artists. Travelling
  • 1956, 5 November – 11 November: John Brack: The Race Course Series. Paintings, Prints
  • 1957: Exhibition of Sculpture. Anita Aarons, Ola Cohn, Clifford Last, Lenton Parr, Clement Meadmore, Andor Mészáros, Tina Wentcher, Teisutis Zikaras, V. Jomantas.
  • 1957: Animal bird fish - paintings, drawings, prints. Douglas Annand, Margaret Bembins, J. Carrington Smith, Arthur Boyd, Dorothy Braund, John Brack, Charles Bush, Raymond Glass, Robert Grieve, Eileen Mayo, Anne Montgomery, Guelda Pyke, Eric Smith, Edith Wall.
  • 1957, 19 March – 28 March: Jack Courier, paintings, drawings, lithographs.
  • 1957: Elma Amor, paintings and Brita Sievers, ceramics

References edit

  1. ^ Prints and Printmaking website.
  2. ^ 'Design and Art Australia Online (governed by a Management Committee comprising representatives of the University of Sydney and University of NSW and Chief Investigators) [1]
  3. ^ "Most Melbourne galleries then were on do-it-yourself lines, most attached to furniture shops,.." Blackman, Barbara. The Good Ship Mora: Melbourne in the Fifties [online]. Meanjin, Vol. 55, No. 2, 1996: 293–305. Availability:[2] ISSN 0025-6293. [cited 9 Jul 15]
  4. ^ Encyclopedia of Melbourne Online
  5. ^ Burstall, Tim & McPhee, Hilary, 1941– & Standish, Ann (2012). The memoirs of a young bastard : the diaries of Tim Burstall, November 1953 to December 1954. Melbourne University Publishing, Carlton, Vic., p.298
  6. ^ a b Palmer Bull, Sheridan (2004), Intersecting cultures : European influences in the fine arts : Melbourne 1940-1960, retrieved 15 October 2020
  7. ^ 'New gallery' The Age Wednesday 07 Dec 1949, p.7
  8. ^ "NEW GALLERY". The Herald. No. 22, 635. Victoria, Australia. 8 December 1949. p. 22. Retrieved 11 August 2021 – via National Library of Australia.
  9. ^ "THE LIFE OF MELBOURNE". The Argus (Melbourne). No. 32, 219. Victoria, Australia. 7 December 1949. p. 12. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  10. ^ Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery (2006), From Tuesday to Tuesday, Mornington, Victoria, retrieved 16 October 2020
  11. ^ "Young people buy pictures". The Argus. No. 33, 031. Melbourne. 16 July 1952. p. 6 – via National Library of Australia.
  12. ^ "Young people buy pictures". The Argus. No. 33, 031. Melbourne. 16 July 1952. p. 6 – via National Library of Australia.
  13. ^ Shore, Arnold (1955). 'Artist stresses human values'. (8 March 1955). The Argus (Melbourne, Victoria: 1848– 1957), p. 13. Retrieved 8 July 2015, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article71637449
  14. ^ "In 1953, he had his first solo exhibition at Peter Bray's Gallery in Melbourne. Collins Street was exhibited at the same gallery in March 1956 and was immediately purchased by the NGV." McKiernan, M. (2010). 'John Brack Collins Street 5 pm, 1955'. Occupational Medicine, 60(2), 88–89.
  15. ^ Johnson, George & Heathcote, C. R. (Christopher Robin) & Zimmer, Jenny, (editor.) (2006). George Johnson : world view. South Yarra, Vic. Macmillan Art Publishing
  16. ^ Inge King's art has "the gadget air". (21 October 1952). The Argus (Melbourne, Victoria: 1848–1957), p. 5. Retrieved 8 July 2015, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article23217241
  17. ^ "In some cases, it is also the artist's role to slice Australia open and show it bizarrely different, quite new in its antiquity. Half a century ago, Sidney Nolan did just this with his desert paintings and those of drought animal carcasses. I recall seeing some of these at the Peter Bray Gallery in 1953 and being bewildered by their aridity: a cruel dryness which made the familiar Ned Kelly paintings seem quite pastoral." Wallace-Crabbe, C. (2003). Gallery Notes. Australian Book Review, August 2003, p.38
  18. ^ a b "Four art styles". The Argus. Melbourne. 21 June 1955. p. 9 – via National Library of Australia.
  19. ^ a b 'Inaugural exhibitions at two galleries' The Age June 5, 1956, p.2
  20. ^ See newspaper articles on Peter Bray Gallery held in the National Library of Australia
  21. ^ McKiernan, M. (2010). 'John Brack Collins Street 5 pm, 1955'. Occupational Medicine, 60(2), 88–89.
  22. ^ Hassall, D. (2015). Arthur Boyd and his' Prodigal son'Mural. Quadrant, 59(1–2), 114.
  23. ^ "One Woman – Nine Men". The Argus. Melbourne. 11 February 1953. p. 4. Retrieved 9 July 2015 – via National Library of Australia.
  24. ^ "Foundations and frustrations". The Herald. No. 23, 355. Victoria, Australia. 1 April 1952. p. 11. Retrieved 18 October 2020 – via National Library of Australia.
  25. ^ 'Sydney artist a "modern romanticist'"', The Age Tuesday 01 Apr 1952, p.2
  26. ^ The Age Tuesday 22 Apr 1952, pps.2, 5
  27. ^ The Age, Tuesday 06 May 1952, p.2
  28. ^ "Inge King's art has "the gadget air"". Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 - 1957). 21 October 1952. p. 5. Retrieved 17 October 2020.
  29. ^ M, H. W. (Autumn 1953). "The Art Galleries". The Port Phillip Gazette. 1 (3): 23.

peter, bray, gallery, commercial, gallery, established, stanley, gallery, 1949, before, being, renamed, 1951, after, change, management, situated, bourke, street, melbourne, victoria, australia, closed, 1957, many, major, names, century, australian, contempora. Peter Bray Gallery a commercial gallery was established as Stanley Coe Gallery in 1949 before being renamed in 1951 after a change of management Situated at 435 Bourke Street Melbourne Victoria Australia it closed in 1957 1 Many of the major names in mid century Australian contemporary art showed there during its brief but very busy lifespan Peter Bray GalleryGeneral informationLocation435 Bourke Street MelbourneCoordinates37 48 54 S 144 57 40 E 37 8151277 S 144 961052 E 37 8151277 144 961052Contents 1 Directors 2 Artists 3 Exhibitions 4 ReferencesDirectors editThe director curators were Helen Ogilvie from 1949 to 1955 and Ruth McNicoll from Sept 1956 to close The gallery was owned by Peter Bray 2 whose interest was in exhibiting pictures and retailing contemporary furniture by Grant Featherston as it was not unusual in the 1950s to combine the two retail lines into the one establishment 3 Artists edit nbsp Gordon De Lisle Couple photographed at exhibition opening at Stanley Coe Gallery 4 December 1950 nbsp Brita Sievers with her ceramics and paintings by Elma Amor at Peter Bray Art Gallery Bourke Street Melbourne Victoria 1957 Photo Wolfgang Sievers and Peter Bray Gallery From the State Library of Victoria Originally Stanley Coe Gallery established in 1949 and taken over by Peter Bray the following year 4 Peter Bray Gallery showed Australian paintings sculpture and prints by significant contemporary artists 5 Printmaker painter Helen Ogilvie 1902 1993 was a generous mentor of emerging artists 6 and in 1949 Stanley Coe appointed her as one of Australia s first women gallery directors to create a commercial exhibition space on the upper floor of his interior design shop at 435 Bourke Street Melbourne 7 8 decorated with pale grey blue walls and hair cord carpet 9 Artist Tate Adams dubbed it the lone beacon in town for contempoary art 10 For the period until 1955 and with advice from her friends Ursula Hoff Arnold Shore and Alan McCulloch she organised a program of exhibitions of the avant garde 6 11 12 John Brack who first exhibited there 27 October November 1953 again in 1955 13 then first showed his Racecourse series 5 15 November 1956 and in the same year the gallery sold his most famous work Collins Street 5 pm to the National Gallery of Victoria 14 Also exhibited there were Margo Lewers Ian Fairweather 23 April 3 May 1956 Leonard French who showed his Illiad series amongst his earliest experiments with enamel house paint on Masonite October 1952 15 Inge King 16 Arthur Boyd 15 24 September 1953 Charles Blackman Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack whose first Australian show in a commercial gallery was there in 1953 Helen Maudsley Sydney Nolan 17 Clifton Pugh 18 Michael Shannon Guy Grey Smith 19 David Dalgarno Ian Armstrong and others 20 nbsp Collins Street was exhibited at the same gallery in March 1956 and was immediately purchased by the National Gallery of Victoria NGV 21 Charles Blackman unveiled his radical series of schoolgirl paintings at the Peter Bray Gallery in May 1953 establishing his reputation in a decade in which he invented the themes that defined his career Abstract sculptor Lenton Parr returning to the country after working as assistant to Henry Moore held his first Australian exhibition at the gallery in 1957 the same year that Arthur Boyd showed his figurative ceramic sculptures there 22 Ogilvie Modernist printmaker painter and craftsperson in her own right was engaged with the Crafts Revival of the 1950s and 60s and made a living designing cutting edge lampshades in London for a period Exhibitions edit nbsp Commercially printed lithographic poster by David Dalgarno for a group exhibition of prints by Melbourne artists Peter Bray Gallery in 1956 Exhibitions at the gallery turned around regularly and were only a week or week and a half in duration Interspersed with the one person shows mentioned above were group shows by artists in a particular medium or by artist groups and societies 23 1951 from 1 November Inge King Grahame King 1952 April Francis Lymburner 24 25 1952 22 Apr 1 May Phyl Waterhouse European and Indian landscapes 26 1952 from 2 May Allan David 27 1952 12 May Paintings and drawings by Charles Blackman 1952 October Len French 1952 October Inge King Constructions in Steel Graham King paintings 28 1953 John Rogers paintings 1953 1 February Multi artist exhibition including season Roger Kemp Charles Blackman and Leonard French 29 1953 23 June 1 July Drought paintings by Sidney Nolan 1953 Paintings by Eric Smith 1953 Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack 1953 15 24 September Arthur Boyd 1953 27 October 5 November Paintings and Drawings by John Brack 1953 Paintings by artists living in Melbourne Charles Blackman Arthur Boyd John Brack Dorothy Braund Leonard French Roger Kemp Graeme King Michael Shannon Eric Thake Alan Warren 1954 Margo Lewers 1954 Painting by the Adelaide 1954 Group Michael Brous Pamel Cleland Ludvik Dutkiewicz Wladyslaw Dutkiewicz Ivor Francis Jacqueline Hick I Rapotec Douglas Roberts Barbara Robertson Francis Roy Thompson Mervyn Ashmore Smith 1954 1 February Nine artists Prints 1955 40 prints by ten artists Tate Adams Geoff Barwell Barbara Brash David Allen Walter Gherdin F Higgs Kenneth Hood Kenneth Jack Jennifer Purnell Harry Rosengrave 1955 8 March 17 March John Brack 1955 20 May 20 June Thirty six prints by twelve Melbourne artists Travelling 1955 June Margaret Bembina Eric Smith Charles Blackman Clifton Pugh 18 1956 Drawings and Prints Melbourne contemporary artists Dorothy Baker George Bell Barbara Brash R A Center William Bill Coleman Dorothea Francis Madge Freeman Alan Foulkes Ann Graham Geoff Jones Roger Kemp Lesley Lawson M E Lormer Harry R Mitchell Anne Montgomery Marjorie North Harry Rosengrave Ellen Rubbo Richard Scales D K Stoner Eveline Syme Elvrida M Verco Percy Watson Marjorie Woolcock 1956 23 April 3 May Ian Fairweather 1956 6 16 June Guy Grey Smith 19 1956 Helen Maudsley 1956 Arthur Boyd paintings and David and Hermia Boyd ceramics 1956 Karin Schepers and Udo Sellbach 1956 25 September 1 November Prints by the Melbourne Graphic Artists Travelling 1956 5 November 11 November John Brack The Race Course Series Paintings Prints 1957 Exhibition of Sculpture Anita Aarons Ola Cohn Clifford Last Lenton Parr Clement Meadmore Andor Meszaros Tina Wentcher Teisutis Zikaras V Jomantas 1957 Animal bird fish paintings drawings prints Douglas Annand Margaret Bembins J Carrington Smith Arthur Boyd Dorothy Braund John Brack Charles Bush Raymond Glass Robert Grieve Eileen Mayo Anne Montgomery Guelda Pyke Eric Smith Edith Wall 1957 19 March 28 March Jack Courier paintings drawings lithographs 1957 Elma Amor paintings and Brita Sievers ceramicsReferences edit Prints and Printmaking website Design and Art Australia Online governed by a Management Committee comprising representatives of the University of Sydney and University of NSW and Chief Investigators 1 Most Melbourne galleries then were on do it yourself lines most attached to furniture shops Blackman Barbara The Good Ship Mora Melbourne in the Fifties online Meanjin Vol 55 No 2 1996 293 305 Availability 2 ISSN 0025 6293 cited 9 Jul 15 Encyclopedia of Melbourne Online Burstall Tim amp McPhee Hilary 1941 amp Standish Ann 2012 The memoirs of a young bastard the diaries of Tim Burstall November 1953 to December 1954 Melbourne University Publishing Carlton Vic p 298 a b Palmer Bull Sheridan 2004 Intersecting cultures European influences in the fine arts Melbourne 1940 1960 retrieved 15 October 2020 New gallery The Age Wednesday 07 Dec 1949 p 7 NEW GALLERY The Herald No 22 635 Victoria Australia 8 December 1949 p 22 Retrieved 11 August 2021 via National Library of Australia THE LIFE OF MELBOURNE The Argus Melbourne No 32 219 Victoria Australia 7 December 1949 p 12 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia Mornington Peninsula Regional Gallery 2006 From Tuesday to Tuesday Mornington Victoria retrieved 16 October 2020 Young people buy pictures The Argus No 33 031 Melbourne 16 July 1952 p 6 via National Library of Australia Young people buy pictures The Argus No 33 031 Melbourne 16 July 1952 p 6 via National Library of Australia Shore Arnold 1955 Artist stresses human values 8 March 1955 The Argus Melbourne Victoria 1848 1957 p 13 Retrieved 8 July 2015 from http nla gov au nla news article71637449 In 1953 he had his first solo exhibition at Peter Bray s Gallery in Melbourne Collins Street was exhibited at the same gallery in March 1956 and was immediately purchased by the NGV McKiernan M 2010 John Brack Collins Street 5 pm 1955 Occupational Medicine 60 2 88 89 Johnson George amp Heathcote C R Christopher Robin amp Zimmer Jenny editor 2006 George Johnson world view South Yarra Vic Macmillan Art Publishing Inge King s art has the gadget air 21 October 1952 The Argus Melbourne Victoria 1848 1957 p 5 Retrieved 8 July 2015 from http nla gov au nla news article23217241 In some cases it is also the artist s role to slice Australia open and show it bizarrely different quite new in its antiquity Half a century ago Sidney Nolan did just this with his desert paintings and those of drought animal carcasses I recall seeing some of these at the Peter Bray Gallery in 1953 and being bewildered by their aridity a cruel dryness which made the familiar Ned Kelly paintings seem quite pastoral Wallace Crabbe C 2003 Gallery Notes Australian Book Review August 2003 p 38 a b Four art styles The Argus Melbourne 21 June 1955 p 9 via National Library of Australia a b Inaugural exhibitions at two galleries The Age June 5 1956 p 2 See newspaper articles on Peter Bray Gallery held in the National Library of Australia McKiernan M 2010 John Brack Collins Street 5 pm 1955 Occupational Medicine 60 2 88 89 Hassall D 2015 Arthur Boyd and his Prodigal son Mural Quadrant 59 1 2 114 One Woman Nine Men The Argus Melbourne 11 February 1953 p 4 Retrieved 9 July 2015 via National Library of Australia Foundations and frustrations The Herald No 23 355 Victoria Australia 1 April 1952 p 11 Retrieved 18 October 2020 via National Library of Australia Sydney artist a modern romanticist The Age Tuesday 01 Apr 1952 p 2 The Age Tuesday 22 Apr 1952 pps 2 5 The Age Tuesday 06 May 1952 p 2 Inge King s art has the gadget air Argus Melbourne Vic 1848 1957 21 October 1952 p 5 Retrieved 17 October 2020 M H W Autumn 1953 The Art Galleries The Port Phillip Gazette 1 3 23 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Peter Bray Gallery amp oldid 1216171753, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.