Abstract Australian Post Modernist Sculpture Peter D. Cole Metal, Enamel, Marble

Abstract Australian Post Modernist Sculpture Peter D. Cole Metal, Enamel, Marble

$5,000.00
Sale price  $5,000.00 Regular price 
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Abstract Australian Post Modernist Sculpture Peter D. Cole Metal, Enamel, Marble

Abstract Australian Post Modernist Sculpture Peter D. Cole Metal, Enamel, Marble

$5,000.00
Sale price  $5,000.00 Regular price 

Dimensions: H: 21.0, W: 4.0, D: 6 IN

Peter D. Cole (Australian, b. 1947) Symbols of Landscape, 1987 Mixed metal, enamel and marble signed P.D. Cole and dated 21 x 6 1/2 x 6 in (53 x 16.5 x 15cm)

Provenance: Macquarie Galleries, Sydney, Australia, 1987.

Sculptor Peter D. Cole was born in Gawler, South Australia and trained at the South Australian School of Art between 1965 and 1968. Since the 1980’s Cole has been based in the Kyneton District of Victoria, where he has established himself as one of Australia’s senior and most renowned contemporary sculptors, drawing on the landscape as a source of inspiration and recent research trips to Japan and India have added to his rich source material.

As a public artist, Cole has made a significant contribution to the urban landscape and public spaces of Australia receiving the Australian National Trust Heritage Award and the Australian Institute of Landscape Architecture Award of Merit for Foundation Park, a permanent work at The Rocks, Sydney. He is highly sought for commissions and his work is prominent in many public and corporate collections throughout Australia, including Parliament House, Canberra, the National Gallery of Australia, and Brisbane International Airport and recently Windsor Railway Station precinct. He was awarded the H.P. Gill medal for top student and the Contemporary arts Society award for drawing in 1968 and has exhibited regularly since 1969 with exhibitions in Australia and America, with notably a solo exhibition in 1995 at The Carpenter Centre, Harvard University USA. Peter D. Cole ranks as one of Australia's senior and most renowned contemporary sculptors. Graphic, minimalist and refined, his uncompromising aesthetic vision encompasses both large-scale structures, aerial works, and more intimate, witty ruminations.

An accomplished water-colourist and draughtsman, Cole's vision translates easily into works on paper, valued by collectors for the insight they provide into his practice. Cole's robust materials- brass, bronze, painted steel and aluminium- vibrant colours and precise shapes articulate spatial, intellectual, and philosophical concepts. He is also interested in the notion of 'diagrammatic' landscapes, ones that express the transition between the flat plains of the Australian bush, and a more city-centric urban cacophony. Cole's work observes and recognises the boundaries of modern life without limiting its scale, or its scope.

Cole is the recipient of the Australian National Trust Heritage Award (1996), the Australian Institute of Landscape Architecture Award of Merit (1995), and is highly sought for commissions. His work is prominent in many public and corporate collections throughout Australia, including Parliament House, Canberra, the National Gallery of Australia, and Brisbane International Airport. Hs work bears similarities to Peter Shire, Charlie Hewitt and Brad Howe. Cole lectured in sculpture between 1975 and 2001 and has worked continuously on his practice encompassing sculpture, painting, drawing, printmaking, design and architecture. His work is represented in many collections both private and public throughout Australia, America, Japan and Europe.

SOLO EXHIBITIONS

2017

A Modern Narrative, Australian Galleries, Sydney

2016

PLACE AND SPACE, Australian Galleries, Melbourne

2013

Australian Galleries, Roylston Street, Sydney

2012

Lister Gallery, Perth

2011

New Sculptures, John Buckley Gallery, Melbourne

2006

New works, Australian Galleries Painting & Sculpture, Sydney

2004

Primary Structure, Calder Lister Gallery, Perth

1997

Steele Gallery, New York, USA

1995

Carpenter Centre for the Visual Arts, Harvard University, Massachusetts, USA

1990

William Mora Gallery, Melbourne

SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS

2021 This is Gippsland, with works by Sidney Nolan, John Wolseley, Anne Montgomery Trevor Vickers, Ann Greenwood, Tony Newsom, Peter Cole, Nick Mount, John Woollard, Cheryl Burgess, Kiyoshi Ino and more. 2019.

Australian Galleries: The Purves Family Business. The First Four Decades, Book Launch and Group Exhibition, Australian Galleries, Melbourne

2019.

papermade, Australian Galleries, Melbourne

2017.

Painting, sculpture and works on paper – Group exhibition, Australian Galleries, Melbourne

2017.

Sculpture: medium and small scale – Mixed Sculptors, Australian Galleries, Sydney

2016.

Impressions, Australian Print Workshop, Melbourne

2014.

one of each, Australian Galleries, Derby Street, Melbourne

2011.

large exhibition of small works, Australian Galleries, Roylston Street, Sydney

2006.

Stock Show, Australian Galleries Painting & Sculpture, Melbourne

2005.

End of Year Group Exhibition, Australian Galleries Painting & Sculpture, Sydney

2003.

This was the future: Australian Sculpture of the 1950s, 60s, 70s + Today, Heide Museum of Modern Art,

2002.

Tokyo Designers Block Idee, Tokyo, Japan

PUBLIC COMMISSIONS

Arts Victoria; Shepparton lake sculpture, Shepparton VIC 19 October 2019

Bank of Melbourne; in consultation with Bates Smart McCutcheon; large freestanding sculptural screen, Melbourne

Brisbane International Airport; in consultation with Bligh Voller architects and Jean Battersby Art Consultants; large suspended sculptures and series of wall installations, Brisbane

Darling Harbour; large scale bronze sculpture, Sydney

Foundation Park (in consultation with Sydney Cove Authority) Hamilton Regional Gallery; permanently located bronze and stone sculpture, Hamilton, VIC

McClelland Gallery & Sculpture Park; tapestry, Langwarrin VIC

Opera Quays Sydney (in consultation with Andrew Andersons of Peddle Thorpe); two large suspended sculptures adjacent to collonade to Opera House, part of the Sydney Cove Sculpture walk, Sydney

Thredbo Alpine Village; large painted steel outdoor sculpture, Thredbo NSW

World Expo 1998 (BHP and Transfield Corporation); relocated to south bank, Brisbane, 200 metre

sculptural walk painted steel, Brisbane

AWARDS

1996.

Australian National Trust Heritage Award for Foundation Park, Sydney

1995.

Australian Institute of Landscape Architecture, Award of Merit for Foundation Park, Sydney

1968.

H.P. Gill Medal, South Australian School of Art, Adelaide

Contemporary Art Society Drawing Prize, Adelaide

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