Harley Brown Gallery

Painting By Artist Harley Brown

Painting By Artist Harley Brown
Picture 21 of 42

Painting By Artist Harley Brown QUESTION TIME Some people have asked questions of me; I thought I'd break away and have the fun of answering just a few. One way is here, like we're together and you're shouted out the queries: ===== So was art everything to you? Where there other interests? Yes, I did have another major interest and that was music. Specifically the piano. I got right into it from age 7. By the time I was 12, I was playing Beethoven and Chopin. There was a time, I wanted to be a concert pianist. In the late teens, that went away and art took full control of me. (I kept playing piano, but just for the fun of it.) ===== In art, did you make money right away? Have another job? Right from the start the day after art college, I got a peddler's license and sold my art door to door. I also played piano nightly in a brothel. Did portraits in bars and fairgrounds. Onward I went. ===== Have you done portraits of celebrities. People of importance? Well, I actually look at everyone as important in their own unique way. Still, I did Clint Eastwood's portrait for a magazine cover. Same with Bettie Page and Sophia Loren. Steve McQueen, Hugh Hefner, many others. President Ronald Reagan for his second inauguration. I'm not tooting my horn here. There are artists who have done many more famous people than me. I'm mentioning this because my life as an artist has gone around many turns. ===== What else has interested you. Art and music we know. Actually, I love to write. I've written four books. One of these books is about my interesting life. In fact, there was a movie studio wanting to perhaps do a film about my world. They read my book plus extra details of my history and they said, "Sorry Mr Brown, your life has been much too bizarre; no one would believe it." Their very words. ===== Anything more you'd like to talk about? That's easy, I'll let my thoughts and ideas flow as time carries on here. There are many, many other things that have happened with me. I'll talk about them in time. I will add that I happy writing about those historic moments than live them, especially at this time of my life. Ah, the memories that I pass on to my young relatives and friends. Friends like those of you who want to put up with them. Am I eccentric? Well, I've said this before but it does bear repeating. I owned 3,000 books that I recently let go. How many of them did I read? Two. And the two that I read did not include any of the four books I authored. Yes, I wrote them, sent in the manuscripts and images, and never read the books after they were published. There we are. Harley Pastel Portrait of Clint Eastwood by Harley Brown #clinteastwood Clint Eastwood Fans

Harley Brown was raised in the Canadian town of Moose Jaw, Saskatchewan. In his teen years, he and his family moved to the great “Stampede” city of Calgary, Alberta. It was there he went to the Alberta College of Fine Art and began to draw and paint the Old West. He also played the honky-tonk piano in an eccentric Calgary nightclub.

He has been a member of the National Academy of Western Art since 1977 and has acquired numerous awards in a number of national art events.

Eager to share his knowledge, Harley Brown has conducted hundreds of invariably sold-out workshops and demonstrations in the US and abroad. He has illustrated many magazine covers and authored numerous articles on art techniques, as well as his best selling books, “Confessions of a Starving Artist”, “Harley Brown’s Eternal Truth for Every Artist” and “Harley Brown’s Inspiration for Every Artist”.

His regular column and insightful Bon mots can be seen in International Artist magazine.

 

Harley Brown is a Canadian painter best known for his depictions of Native Americans in traditional dress. Painting in a realistic style with loose brushwork, Brown manages to maintain a strong attention to detail with the ability to capture the likeness of his subjects with a lively and colorful palette.

Born in 1939 in Edmonton, Canada, Brown went on to study at the Alberta College of Art in Calgary followed by the Camberwell School of Art in England. After returning to his home country, the artist met Bob Morgan, the curator of the Montana State Historical Society, where he subsequently had a solo show.

Brown is a member of the Northwest Rendezvous Artists, the National Association of Watercolor Artists, the Oil Painters of America, and the Cowboy Artists of America. He lives and works in Tucson, AZ.


Harley Brown is a man of many faces.

He is Canadian. He has a Russian alter ego. He was an English expatriate. But above all else, he is an artist.
He is an artist of magazine illustrations and an artist of words inside three best-selling books. However, he is mostly known for being an artist of portraits that capture the faces of American Indians.

Inspired by bands of American Indians who lived down his street in his native Saskatchewan, a prairie province in Canada, Brown found “such interesting faces with their cheekbones, and some of the older guys with the extremely dramatic faces that they have with the noses and the lips.”

Finding their history “such a great mystery that we still have as part of our culture,” he says he was eventually drawn to the powerful aura of Sitting Bull, the Lakota Sioux holy man who had led his band to exile in Saskatchewan in 1877. Brown gained notoriety when his portrait of Sitting Bull set a record for the artist in 2008 when it sold at the Coeur d’Alene Art Auction for a $30,000 bid, twice its estimation.

Like most artists, though, it took years of dedication, sketching and begging before Brown found success in the Western art world.

“They kicked me out of art school,” Brown admits. “At that point, I said to myself, as I was standing outside the school, crying, ‘Well, I’m not going to work for a living…. If I do make money, or I don’t make money, I’m going to do art. And nothing else.”

With a pocketful of dimes and living on a gas station credit card in Helena, Montana, he peddled his art at restaurants, galleries and frame shops, but no one seemed interested in his work.

“In the last moment I went to the State Historical Society, which is a big deal,” Brown says. “I thought, ‘I got nothing to lose,’ went in there and showed my work to the curator.”
He walked out with an offer to be the first living artist shown at the institution in a one-man exhibit. His work sold out.

For the July’s centennial celebration of the Calgary Stampede, Brown has earned the prestige of creating an original drawing for the event’s poster. He painted it to connect the history of the stampede to today’s younger generation.

Looking ahead to the future, when people come across his art, it’s not his face that he wants remembered.
“I hope they see, number one, the person,” Brown says. “That’s what it’s about. I want them to see who I’m painting. That person, that individual, the life in that person brought to life.”


Canadian Artist Harley Brown Painting
Canadian Artist Harley Brown Painting

 


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