Roland Brener
Roland Brener | |
---|---|
Born |
February 22, 1942 Johannesburg, South Africa |
Died |
March 22, 2006 Victoria, Canada |
Nationality | Canadian |
Education | St. Martin's School of Art |
Known for | Sculpture |
Movement | abstract art, modernism, postmodernism |
Spouse(s) | Dama Hanks-Brener |
Roland Brener (February 22, 1942 – March 22, 2006) was a South African-born Canadian artist.[1][2][3]
Brener was born in Johannesburg, and studied art at Saint Martin's School of Art under Anthony Caro. He completed his academic training in 1965, and in 1967, Brener was one of the founders of the Stockwell Depot, a studio and exhibition space occupying part of a disused brewery in south London. Brener taught at Saint Martin's, at the University of California, Santa Barbara and at the University of Iowa before being appointed Associate Professor at the University of Victoria in British Columbia in 1974. He retired from teaching in 1997 and continued to live and work in Victoria, Canada until his death in 2006.
Brener's early practice grew from the formalist innovations of his contemporaries at Saint Martin's. During the 1980s his work developed a more playful individuality as he began to incorporate consumer items, most often toys, and experiment with kinetic sculpture driven by electronic motors or computers. In his later work he began to use the computer as a design tool to produce fantastical distortions of everyday images and objects which were then fabricated in wood or synthetic materials.
During his lifetime Roland Brener was a distinguished sculptor and art educator in Canada and his work is represented in most of the major public collections in the country, including Toronto's Art Gallery of Ontario and the National Gallery of Canada in Ottawa. Brener represented Canada at the São Paulo Art Biennial in 1987 and the Venice Biennale in 1988. More recently, Brener exhibited Swinger at Deitch Projects (2000) in New York, and in Part Two, a duo exhibition with Mowry Baden, at the Art Gallery of Greater Victoria (2006). His public sculpture Radioville, a re-working of his earlier sculptures Endsville and Capital Z, was installed in 2005 on the site of an old CBC radio-antenna tower central Toronto.
Honours
References
- ↑ Roland Brener Biography, The Centre for Contemporary Canadian Art
- ↑ Nicholas Tuele, Roland Brener, The Canadian Encyclopedia, March 3, 2008
- ↑ Caroline Langill, "Shifting Polarities", Daniel Langlois Foundation, 2009
- ↑ "Members since 1880". Royal Canadian Academy of Arts. Retrieved 11 September 2013.
External links
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