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Brent Harris: Surrender & Catch

Brent Harris retrospective in Adelaide
Art Gallery of South Australia
by
ABR Arts 23 July 2024

Brent Harris: Surrender & Catch

Brent Harris retrospective in Adelaide
Art Gallery of South Australia
by
ABR Arts 23 July 2024
Brent Harris born Palmerston North, New Zealand 4 October 1956 I weep my mother’s breasts 1996, Melbourne oil on linen 57.0 x 96.7 cm; Courtesy of the artist and Robert Heald Gallery, Wellington © Brent Harris
Brent Harris born Palmerston North, New Zealand 4 October 1956 I weep my mother’s breasts 1996, Melbourne oil on linen 57.0 x 96.7 cm; Courtesy of the artist and Robert Heald Gallery, Wellington © Brent Harris

Art travels, or it does not – in the latter case, often unjustly. Artists known in one country are not always visible beyond it, just as national cultures of literature and music often develop and remain supported entirely from within. This does not mean, however, that the artists, writers, and musicians themselves are untravelled, nor that their individual practices evolve in ignorance of what is happening elsewhere.

Brent Harris might be judged one such artist, a painter and printmaker whose work is known chiefly in Aotearoa New Zealand, where he was born in 1956, and Australia, where he was trained and has lived since graduating from art school. Despite his travels and residencies overseas and appearances in group shows in Europe, Harris has not yet enjoyed the level of international recognition that he so clearly deserves. The Art Gallery of South Australia’s new exhibition ‘Brent Harris: Surrender & Catch’ (mounted in partnership with the TarraWarra Museum of Art, where a first iteration of the exhibition was on display earlier in 2023-24), along with an accompanying volume edited by curator Maria Zagala, offers a compelling retrospective of this singular artist’s work, making what might be considered a case for acclaim, and one that I found convincing.

From the New Issue