Peter Bray Gallery


Peter Bray Gallery was established at 435 Bourke Street, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia in 1951, and closed in 1957. Many of the major names in mid-century Australian contemporary art showed there during its brief, but very busy, lifespan.

Directors

The director/curators were Helen Ogilvie and Ruth McNicoll. The gallery was owned by Peter Bray, 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

Artists

Originally Stanley Coe Gallery, established in 1950, and taken over by Peter Bray the following year, Peter Bray Gallery showed Australian paintings, sculpture and prints by significant contemporary artists.
As the director of Peter Bray Gallery, Helen Ogilvie organised exhibitions for such avant-garde artists as John Brack who first exhibited there 27 OctoberNovember 1953, again in 1955, 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.
Also exhibited there were Margo Lewers, Ian Fairweather, Leonard French, Inge King, Arthur Boyd, Charles Blackman, Ludwig Hirschfeld Mack, Helen Maudsley, Sydney Nolan, Clifton Pugh, Michael Shannon, Guy Grey-Smith, David Dalgarno, Ian Armstrong and others.
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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. 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 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.