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Item Name: Painting
Title: Untitled (Bright Coloured Industrial Scene)
Maker: Stanley Brunst
Year: 1935
Country: Canadian
Materials: watercolour on paper
Measurements: overall: 30 cm x 21.75 cm
ID Number: PC91.5
Legal Status: PERMANENT COLLECTION


Extended Label Info: Painter Stanley Brunst was interested in abstraction within his representational work. In his early artworks, he adopted ideas from Cubism and Art Deco, experimenting with simplification, perspective, patterning, colour and nonrepresentational images. In this painting, Brunst portrays an industrial landscape in joyous colours, using simplified and playful geometric shapes. His use of colour is similar to other works created in the early 20th century, such as the abstractions by Wassily Kandinsky, who known for his sense of play and experimentation. Stanislaw Ernst Brunst (1894 - 1962) lived in Saskatoon from 1923 to 1941 and painted both the urban and rural landscape. He had very little formal art education but took night classes at the University with Gus Kendardine during the Depression years. As a member of Ernest Lindner's Art Association of Saskatchewan, which formed in 1939, Brunst took part in lively salon discussions and exhibited his work with other Saskatoon artists. His artwork is more abstracted than the landscapes by his Saskatchewan peers, whose works were often more realistic like the Romantic British landscape tradition. In 1941, Brunst moved to Vancouver and continued to paint, participating in the local arts community with artists Lawren Harris and Emily Carr, and exhibiting at the Vancouver Art Gallery. In 1982, the Mendel Art Gallery (now Remai Modern) organized a retrospective of his work. In 2010, several of Brunst’s works were included in Dunlop Art Gallery’s exhibition, “Cynthia Girard: The Black Glove and the Peacock”. Brunst's work is held in numerous private and public collections, including Vancouver Art Gallery, and the Saskatchewan Arts Board.