Lina_Bryans

Lina Bryans

Lina Bryans

Australian artist (1909–2000)


Lina Bryans OAM (26 September 1909 – 30 September 2000), was an Australian modernist painter.

Quick Facts OAM, Born ...

Life

Lina Bryans was born in Hamburg, Germany, on 26 August 1909,[1] second daughter of wealthy prosperous Michaelis-Hallenstein family of industrialists, Australians Edward and Lina Hallenstein, who were then visiting Europe. The following year they settled in Toorak, Melbourne, Victoria, and Lina grew up moving between Australia, England and France.[2] She used her knowledge of French to work as a translator. She married Baynham Bryans in 1931 and they had a son, Edward (24 June 1932 – 23 March 2010), who made his name as a newsreader on ABC radio and television. The marriage broke down and Lina moved to South Yarra in 1936. She met William (Jock) Frater[3] and decided with his help and encouragement to become a painter. She'd had no involvement with art before.[4][1]

Early works

A modernist, Bryans was associated with Frater's circle which included Ada May Plante and Isabel Hunter Tweddle. Her first works were painted early in 1937 and Basil Burdett selected her Backyards, South Yarra in 1938 for the Herald Exhibition of Outstanding Pictures of 1937.[5] Her work was included in Burdett's article in Studio (1938) and in the exhibition, Art of Australia 1788-1941, shown at MOMA (New York) in 1941.

The Pink Hotel

Bryans went to live in Darebin Bridge House, a converted coach-house at Darebin, in the late 1930s, joining Ada May Plante. Bryans subsequently purchased it using her inheritance, painted and decorated it distinctively and named it "The Pink Hotel".[6] It became an artists' colony for Bryans, Plante, Frater, Ambrose Hallen and Ian Fairweather and other artists.

From 1945 she opened the doors to the Meanjin group: Vance and Nettie Palmer, Rosa and Dolia Ribush, Jean Campbell, Laurie Thomas and Alan McCulloch. There they joined the moderates in the Contemporary Art Society (Norman Macgeorge, Clive Stephen, Isobel Tweddle and Rupert Bunny, Sybil Craig, Guelda Pyke, Elma Roach, Ola Cohn and Madge Freeman and George Bell). The liberal, conservative modernists in Melbourne were thus given an identity and a base,[7] attracting group of writers associated with the journal Meanjin, in turn sparking an interest in journalism in Lina's son Edward.

Mid-career

In 1948 Bryans had her first solo exhibition. It included Nude (1945, NGV) and Portrait of Nina Christesen (1947),[8] both painted at Darebin, which she sold later that year and moved to Harkaway, near Berwick. She took a few lessons from George Bell in 1948 and from Mary Cockburn Mercer in 1951. In 1953 she went to America, then to France, where she studied for a few months at La Grande Chaumière and visited Mercer in the south of France. Back at Melbourne, she once more became prominent in the city's artistic and cultural milieu.

Recognition

Landscape painting was always important to Bryans and throughout the 1960s and 1970s, it became more dramatic and abstract. In 1965 she visited Central Australia and painted modernist paintings of the Australian bush in heightened colour. She was awarded the 1966 Crouch Prize for Embedded Rock (1964, BFAG). Her major work Landscape Quartet from her second solo exhibition, held at Georges Gallery in 1966, was purchased by the National Gallery of Victoria, which awarded her a retrospective in 1982, held at Banyule Gallery in 1982, which subsequently toured regional galleries in Victoria.

Nevertheless, as Forwood notes (2001), her portraits 'best reveal her contribution to Australian art’, moreover, 'her seventy-three portraits of friends engaged in the world of art and letters form a pictorial biography of Bryans herself’.[9] Her well-known, jaunty portrait of Australian writer Jean May Campbell,[10] The Babe is Wise, (named after Campbell's novel of the year before) was painted in 1940. It is held in the National Gallery of Victoria collection.

Bryans was a member of the Independent Group. In 1991 she rejoined the Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors, in which she had first enlisted in 1940 and quit in 1966. In the 1960s, as a guest exhibitor, she was one of the most important and professional artists associated with the Society, and critics consistently placed her works at the forefront of MSWPS group shows.[11] In 1966 one faction of the MSWPS was anxious to see the high-standing artist Lina Bryans elected president for her dynamic outlook.[12]

In the 1994 Queen's Birthday Honours Bryans was awarded the Medal of the Order of Australia (OAM) for "service to the visual arts as a landscape painter".[13]

Exhibition history

Solo exhibitions

  • 1948, 1966 Georges Gallery, Melbourne.

Major curated exhibitions

  • 1937, Joseph Brown Gallery, Melbourne
  • 1941 Art of Australia Museum of Modern Art New York
  • 1988 Creating Australia, Art Gallery of South Australia[14]
  • 1988 The Face of Australia (National touring exhibition associated with the Australian Bicentennial[15]
  • 1982 Retrospective National Gallery of Victoria
  • 1992 Survey exhibition at the National Gallery of Victoria
  • 1995 Survey exhibition at University of Melbourne.

Collections

Further reading

  • Forwood, Gillian (2001), 'Lina Bryans 1909-2000’, Art and Australia vol. 38, no.4.
  • Forwood, Gillian & Bryans, Lina, 1909-2000 (2003). Lina Bryans : rare modern, 1909-2000. Miegunyah Press, Carlton, Vic
  • Bryans, Lina & Forwood, Gillian & Ian Potter Gallery (1995). The babe is wise : Lina Bryans and her portraits. The University of Melbourne Museum of Art, Parkville, Vic
  • Germaine, Max (1991), A Dictionary of Women Artists of Australia, Roseville East (NSW).
  • McCulloch, Alan & McCulloch, Susan (1994), The Encyclopedia of Australian Art, St Leonards (NSW).
  • Minchin, Jan (1982), Lina, National Gallery of Victoria catalogue, Melbourne.
  • Bryans, Lina & Phipps, Jennifer, 1944- & National Gallery of Victoria & Art Gallery of Ballarat & Geelong Art Gallery et al. (1982). Lina Bryans : a retrospective exhibition. National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne

References

  1. Callaway, Anita. "Lina Bryans b. 26 September 1909". Design & Art Australia Online (DAAO). Retrieved 3 April 2018.
  2. Burke, Janine (1980). Australian Women Artists 1840-1940. Collingwood (Vic.). p. 67.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  3. Burke, Janine (1980) Australian women artists, 1840-1940. Greenhouse Publications
  4. Athenaeum Gallery (Melbourne, Vic.) (1938), The Herald exhibition of outstanding pictures of 1937 opened by the Hon Theodore Fink at the Athenaeum Gallery Melbourne, March 1, 1938, Melbourne Athenaeum Gallery, retrieved 24 November 2014
  5. Bryans, Lina (1986). The Pink Hotel. -Interview with artist Lina Bryans by Valerie Albiston-. In This Australia. 5 (4), 32-37.
  6. Forwood, Gillian & Bryans, Lina, 1909–2000 (2003). Ch.3 'Darebin Bridge House and the Art Establishment 1940–1945' in Lina Bryans : rare modern, 1909–2000. Miegunyah Press, Carlton, Vic
  7. Forwood, Gillian (2000), 'Death of Lina Bryans: 1909-2000’, 11, Art Monthly.
  8. De Lacy, Gavin (1 May 2009), "Three neglected women writers of the 1930s: Jean Campbell, 'Capel Boake', and 'Georgia Rivers'", The La Trobe Journal (83), State Library of Victoria Foundation: 27(15), ISSN 1441-3760
  9. "The most arresting pictures come from Lina Bryans, who exhibits a strong portrait in blue entitled Listening to Berlioz..." Allen Warren, The Sun 24 October 1961
  10. Peers, Juliette; Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors (1993), More than just gumtrees : a personal, social and artistic history of the Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors, Melbourne Society of Women Painters and Sculptors in association with Dawn Revival Press, ISBN 978-0-646-16033-7
  11. "Lina Bryans". Australian Honours Search Facility, Dept of the Prime Minister and Cabinet. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
  12. Thomas, Daniel, 1931-; Radford, Ron, 1949-; Art Gallery of South Australia; Australian Bicentennial Authority; International Cultural Corporation of Australia; Great Australian Art Exhibition 1788-1988 (1988-1989) (1988), Creating Australia, 200 years of art 1788-1988, International Cultural Corporation of Australia [and] Art Gallery Board of South Australia, ISBN 978-0-642-13433-2{{citation}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  13. Hansen, David; Australian Bicentennial Authority (1988), The face of Australia : the land & the people, the past & the present (1st ed.), Child & Associates, ISBN 978-0-86777-181-7

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