Biography
Bryan Pearce was born in St Ives, Cornwall in 1929, a sufferer
of the then unknown condition Phenylketonuria, which affects
the normal development of the brain. Encouraged by his mother
who was herself a painter, and then by other St Ives artists,
he began drawing and painting in watercolours in 1953.
From
1953 to 1957 he attended St Ives School of Painting under Leonard
Fuller. In
1957 Pearce began painting in oils and started to exhibit regularly
at the Penwith Gallery in St Ives. He became an Associate of
the Penwith Society of Arts in Cornwall, and later a full member,
having been sponsored by the sculptor Denis Mitchell. He is
also a member of the Newlyn Society of Artists; it was at the
instigation of Peter Lanyon that he had his first solo show
at Newlyn Gallery in 1959.
Now
one of the country's foremost living naive painters, Pearce
is well know for portraying the local St Ives landscape and
still-life compositions in oil, conte, pen and ink, and pencil.
In the early 1970s Pearce began to make small etchings with
the assistance of fellow artists Breon O'Casey and Bryan Ingham,
and later Roy Walker. Since 1976 a number of his oil paintings
have been made into limited edition screenprints in order to
bring his distinctive images to a wider public.
He has
always worked slowly, but consistently, producing perhaps twelve
oil paintings a year. Often compared to Alfred Wallis, the late
Peter Lanyon has said of him: "Because his sources are not seen
with a passive eye, but are truly happenings, his painting is
original."
Over
the past 40 years Bryan Pearce has exhibited throughout the
country, including the New Art Centre, Victor Waddington Gallery
and Stoppenbach & Delestre in London; Beaux Arts in Bath and
the Oxford Museum of Modern Art. In St Ives he has shown at
the Sail Loft Gallery, Wills Lane Gallery and the New Craftsman.
Public
Collections include: the Tate Gallery, the Arts Council, the
Contemporary Arts Society and Kettle's Yard, Cambridge.