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Bronwyn Oliver Sold at Auction Prices

b. 1959 - d. 2006

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        • BRONWYN OLIVER, AURA, 1996 - 97
          Nov. 26, 2024

          BRONWYN OLIVER, AURA, 1996 - 97

          Est: $150,000 - $250,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) AURA, 1996 - 97 copper 104.0 x 114.0 x 12.0 cm PROVENANCE Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Perth, acquired from the above in 2000 EXHIBITED Bronwyn Oliver, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 12 November – 20 December 1997 Bronwyn Oliver: Botanic, McClelland Sculpture Park and Gallery, Langwarrin, 13 November 2005 – 5 February 2006 LITERATURE Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 219 (dated '1996') RELATED WORK Cocoon, 1995, copper, 185.0 x 15.0 x 15.0 cm, private collection, ibid., p. 219 ESSAY Bronwyn Oliver’s delicate monochrome sculptures exist in the world with quiet and understated elegance. An unintended consequence of the artist’s formal and material development, their final forms appear organic, albeit parachuted from a mysterious and unknown origin. Having received early training in New British sculpture, Oliver’s practice was deeply rooted in the idea of truth and respect for her materials, her techniques emphasising authentic hand-worked craftsmanship. She was careful to dispel assertions that traced her inspiration directly from nature: ‘My ideas do not begin with natural forms. My ideas develop from the materials which I use and are not even remotely concerned with natural observation. I am interested in structure and what materials will do.’1 Adopting the radiant and divine form of a large crescent, patinated a solemn matte black, Bronwyn Oliver’s sewn copper sculpture Aura, 1996 – 97 is delicately balanced between opposing tensions. While an inner rib of stiff sheet copper is curved into a smooth and distinctive numinous shape, Aura’s outermost surface is covered in bulbous forms. They appear to bloom outwards, their perforated surfaces straining against tightly crisscrossed cords. While not as stiff and overtly biomorphic as its closely related cousin, the baton-shaped bud-laden stem of Cocoon, 1995, Aura’s bipartite structure of trussed segments is similarly rendered with the relatively malleable medium of copper gauze. Laboriously individually moulded, parcelled and sewn together, these trussed protrusions are irregular. They cast a knobbly shadow with shifting moiré effects, contrasting with Aura’s smooth interior sweep. Pleased with this effect, Oliver used a similar technique in later works such as Garland, 2006 (now in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia). Finishing in tapered points, the complete form of Aura is that of a closed biological vessel, its straining tension and breathable gauze skin alluding to an invisible living form enclosed within a bound package. Western Art holds a rich history of wrapped and bound forms, from Michelangelo’s sculptures of bound slaves to Christo’s contemporary environmental interventions, often illustrating tensions between constriction and escape; concealment and unveiling. This dichotomy has been a persistent thread within Bronwyn Oliver’s practice. Wall-mounted with awe-inspiring proportions, Aura’s presence is one of resolute permanence, endowed with a strange divine power emanating from its arc-shaped form. A crown of light rays, or disc of radiant light is an ancient iconographic device denoting divinity that has travelled across cultures, from Helios with his radiate crown to modern depictions of Amitabha Buddha. Generally denoting a ring of light encircling the head and bust, an aura is usually attached to a holy or sacred figure. Here, Oliver’s dark Aura is divorced from its gigantic owner, waiting expectantly to confer its divine power to those near it. 1. Bronwyn Oliver, cited in Sturgeon, G., Contemporary Australian Sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991, pp. 73 – 74 LUCIE REEVES-SMITH © Estate of Bronwyn Oliver. Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, VESSEL, 1991
          Nov. 26, 2024

          BRONWYN OLIVER, VESSEL, 1991

          Est: $150,000 - $250,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) VESSEL, 1991 copper and bronze 170.0 x 20.0 x 20.0 cm PROVENANCE Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above in 1994 EXHIBITED Bronwyn Oliver: Fabrications, Auckland City Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, Auckland, New Zealand, 7 July – 20 August 1992, cat, 1 Bronwyn Oliver, Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne, 8 September – 8 October 1992 Bronwyn Oliver, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 21 July – 7 August 1993 LITERATURE Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, pp. 86, 219 RELATED WORK Curlicue, 1991, copper, 45.0 x 250.0 x 15.0 cm, in the collection of Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane Labyrinth, 1991, copper, 174.0 x 57.0 x 18.0 cm, in the collection of Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki, Auckland, New Zealand ESSAY With striking simplicity and an ambiguous sexual charge, Bronwyn Oliver’s open-weave copper Vessel strains vertically, its flared mouth ready to receive intangible nourishment. In early 1991, the young sculptor first embarked on a series of long and thin vertical works. The resulting fabrications exhibited an elegant downward cascade, unfurling organically, or, like Vessel, 1991, a proud rectitude and optimistic verticality. Here, the central shaft, with discernible horizontal wire struts, is finely woven into a helix. It extends from a pendulous spherical base, ringed with hairs, to a mouth which simply gapes open, slightly askew. Like a pistil, the reproductive organ in the centre of a flower, the bulbous base of Vessel supports a long column topped by a flared opening, mirroring the stigma, where pollen is germinated. However, despite these formal associations with natural shapes, Oliver insisted that her works did not consciously stem from any personal investigations into organic morphology. Her verdigris sculptures are instead endowed with an otherworldly aura of mysterious antiquity. Delicate and airy, its grid-like lattice fabricated from small-gauge copper wire, Vessel is as defined by its physical, handmade presence as it is by its absence, by the glimpses revealed through the perforations and the space enclosed within this helicoidal funnel and its pouch. Of a similar fishnet construction to the casual horizontal Curlicue, 1991, the regularity of Vessel’s lattice creates an optical rhythm, redoubled by its projected shadow. Ethereal and yet permanent, Vessel displays an improbable lightness of touch and what Elwyn Lynn identified as an ‘ease of drawing.’1 With slightly wobbly wire lines and a ‘natural’ fall that is not dead-straight, Vessel has a warm, handmade authenticity complementing its swollen, life-affirming shapes. Oliver’s abstract fabrications emphasised craftsmanship, their surfaces shaped by a profound respect for materials and their metaphorical properties – all hallmarks of the New British Sculpture Movement, which the artist had encountered during her time at the Chelsea School of Art in London in the early 1980s. Other practitioners at the forefront of this movement were Richard Deacon, Tony Cragg, Alison Wilding, Shirazeh Houshiary, Anish Kapoor and Antony Gormley. In June 1991, Oliver presented some of her new vertical works in her solo exhibition at Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, which was positively reviewed in the local Sydney newspapers. In August of that year, she participated in Perspecta, the only survey show for contemporary Australian art at the time. Victoria Lynn, writing in the catalogue noted that ‘the shadows they [Oliver’s sculptures] cast are clearly intrinsic to the structure of the pieces. Shadows echo and extend the spatial principles, negotiating the border between two-dimensionality and three-dimensionality, between surface and space, between image and structure.’2 Oliver used the relative density, direction and shapes within her metal weaving as a distinguishing feature between works of similar forms and dimensions. For example, Rope, 1991 adopts a very similar shape to Vessel, one with ‘the sense of a parable, of Rapunzel or Jack and the Beanstalk’3, only rendered with a dense wrapped surface. For those with a delicate and open weave, particularly Vessel’s optical grid, a strong frontal light casts a twin, flat shadow with the layers of Oliver’s three-dimensional form concertinaed into a complex image. This tension between Vessel’s fragile structure and its dense shadow is masterful and animates the subtle torsion inherent in Oliver’s woven helix. 1. Lynn, E., ‘Intimacy and nature’, The Australian, Sydney, 17 June 1989 2. Lynn, V., Australian Perspecta 1991, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 1991, p. 78 3. Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver. Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 86 LUCIE REEVES-SMITH © Estate of Bronwyn Oliver. Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, FLOW, 2002
          Aug. 28, 2024

          BRONWYN OLIVER, FLOW, 2002

          Est: $250,000 - $350,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) FLOW, 2002 copper 80.0 cm diameter PROVENANCE Private collection, New South Wales, a private commission from the artist in 2002 EXHIBITED Bronwyn Oliver, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 21 November – 14 December 2002 LITERATURE Fink, H.,  Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, pp. 145, 148 (illus.), 149 (illus.), 220 ESSAY A large swirling orb, with fluid bristles and filaments emanating from its surface, the aptly titled Flow, 2002 echoes the joyful organic rhythms and structures that govern the natural world within which it was placed. Described as ‘perhaps Oliver’s most successfully realised garden work’1, Flow was commissioned privately at the height of the late sculptor’s fame, in the first years of the new millennium, a period during which her work was dominated by two essential hollow forms: the sphere and the ovoid. In 1999, Oliver received her first major sculptural commission from the City of Sydney, for which she created a pair of oversized seed forms made of welded copper, Palm and Magnolia (Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney). Following the public success of these sculptures, in the early 2000s, she experienced a flurry of private commissions. For many of these, she proposed a series of unstable orb-like forms with filigreed carapaces realised in monumental dimensions when installed outdoors, with others retaining an intimate and domestic scale. Flow, realised with a skilful smooth manipulation of individual copper rods, each terminating abruptly in a small bulb, is amongst Oliver’s most fluid and self-assured compositions.   ‘The structure of the sphere should echo the vitality of the growth around it. This sphere has a gently spiralling density. From within the structure, a profusion of hairs emerges, each with a blunt tip which curves around the spiral but remains within the fibrous husk of the form. The lichen on the garden bench has a kind of woolliness. There is a very delicate texture of fuzz in the tiny vine spreading over the tree leading down to the garden and the grasses are hairy and shaggy. This hairy growth habit became the subject for sculpture and the sphere seemed the natural form.’2   Understanding Flow within the context of the above artistic rationale, supplied to the present owners alongside a maquette and proposal ahead of the commission, the relationship of poetic associations with the sculpture’s intended garden site becomes clear. Oliver continually denied any overt naturalistic inspiration in her work, occasionally explaining that any organic associations would have arisen naturally from her post-modern practice learned at the Chelsea School of Art, which was grounded in the action of creation and infused with profound respect for materials. The ‘hairs’ that create the surface of Flow’s orb, loosely and organically follow the pattern of magnetic radiation between two poles, becoming longitudinal lines emanating from the northernmost pole before converging at its base.3   Although many of Oliver’s commissions from this period had smooth closely woven surfaces and smooth profiles, such as Core, Orb and Globe, Flow’s contours are uniquely rippled, its regular undulations echoing the overlapping branches of trees and creating an enticing tactile quality. This is an unusual form, with Oliver’s usual copper wire not woven into a web of intersecting fenestrations, but instead kept intact in long threads of copper wire (of a uniform gauge) loosely combed together in flowing strands. As Graeme Sturgeon noted, as early as 1991, the structural principles that determine Oliver’s forms can be distilled to the consistent actions of ‘spiralling, wrapping, binding, swelling, expanding and stretching’4, all processes of becoming or clear movement, often clearly repeated in the sculptor’s concise choice of title with emphatic one-word verbs, such as Flow.   Although its imposing dimensions ensure the sculpture maintains its own integrity within a densely vegetated outdoor setting, Flow’s hollow interior and open form fret-work allow for modest transparency and for the work, in the right atmospheric conditions, to ‘appear filled with light.’5 Flow was created specifically for Rob and Robin White’s country residence, Jamberoo House, to be nestled in the valley below the award-winning house designed by Glenn Murcutt. Intended to become a collaborative presence within the garden, Flow reflects and emulates the contours of the surrounding animate and inanimate objects, perched on a boulder beside a staircase hewn into the rock.   One of Australia's most highly regarded contemporary sculptors, Bronwyn Oliver remains celebrated for her extraordinary ability to produce meticulously articulated works of immense beauty and grace which unite timeless, organic forms of the natural world with the abstract logic of geometry. Oliver's delicately woven and enduring copper forms continue to surprise and inspire – their enigmatic presence beguiling both the eye and the mind. 1. Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver. Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 145 2. Artist’s rationale, 2002, reproduced ibid. 3. With the neat flatness of these poles, Oliver has (perhaps unknowingly) illustrated a mathematical theorem of topology colloquially known as the ‘Hairy Ball Theorem’. 4. Sturgeon, G., Contemporary Australian Sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991, p. 73 5. Although speaking of another contemporaneous commission in Massachusetts, Orb, the same effect has been created with Flow.   LUCIE REEVES-SMITH © Estate of Bronwyn Oliver. Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, CLASP, 2006
          Aug. 28, 2024

          BRONWYN OLIVER, CLASP, 2006

          Est: $250,000 - $350,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) CLASP, 2006 copper 215.0 x 20.0 x 20.0 cm PROVENANCE Estate of the artist, Sydney Private collection, Italy, from 2009 Menzies, Melbourne, 9 February 2017, lot 34 Private collection, Sydney EXHIBITED Bronwyn Oliver (1959 – 2006), Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 10 August – 2 September 2006 LITERATURE Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 221 (as ‘Clasp II’) ESSAY ‘When the ideas, the formal elements and the medium all work together, a sculpture will ‘sing’ with a kind of rightness. It takes on a life, a presence, which is removed from this world. It belongs to a mythical other life, without a place in time.’1 One of Australia's most innovative contemporary sculptors, Bronwyn Oliver remains celebrated for her extraordinary ability to produce meticulously articulated works of immense beauty and grace which unite timeless, organic forms of the natural world with the abstract logic of geometry. As elucidated by Hannah Fink in her introduction to the artist’s posthumous exhibition at Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery in August 2006 which notably featured the present Clasp, 2006, ‘...Bronwyn was modest, yet utterly sure of her vision, secure in the confidence of her originality. Her art was fully resolved – perfect, really – and she stands alone in the annals of Australian art history. There was no-one like her: she invented her own deeply intelligent form, and entered fully into the world that it opened out to her.’2 Created only months before her untimely death in 2006, Clasp offers a superb, albeit poignant, example of Oliver’s delicately woven copper and bronze assemblages that universally seek to surprise and inspire – beguiling both the eye and mind through their enigmatic presence. Arguably echoing the paradoxes inherent within the artist own personality3, her works are simple yet complicated, fragile yet strong, eccentric though oddly straightforward. Moreover, with their tactility and anatomical physicality, such intricately executed forms invariably elicit a temptation to touch – the sensual, prehistorically scaled versions of natural phenomena thus reminding us that the world is a corporeal place. Yet too often the easy, sensual curves of Oliver's objects belie the punishing, labour intensive process to which the artist was so tenaciously committed. As intimated by the present sculpture’s allusive title meaning to hold tightly or to fasten something with one’s hands, Oliver would painstakingly manipulate dizzying twistings and welds of pliant copper wire to create her signature ‘weave’ – the microstructure of her organic sculptural forms which gradually became more open and geometric to allow light to permeate and exaggerate their optical aspect. Indeed, the shadows cast by her objects – whether vertically mounted, flowing tendril shapes (such as the present sculpture), calligraphic sweeping curves, or seed and pod-like spheres – are so intrinsic to the formalist geometry of each piece that at times the shadow itself almost becomes more powerful... becomes the object.4 Evoking a duality between that which is immobile and inert, yet also active and dynamic, thus the interplay between these aspects suggests, as Natasha Bullock notes, ‘… a passage from one place to another, a journey from a material dimension into an imaginative other world.’5 Elegant and refined, Clasp encapsulates well Oliver’s unique legacy of beauty, wonder, strength and life – her skilful mastery of form, space and material to create flawless sculptural works that, although unmistakably contemporary in their construction, simultaneously betray a timeless, ethereal quality that resonates deeply within the human soul. 1. Oliver cited in Sturgeon, G., ‘Bronwyn Oliver’, Contemporary Australian Sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991, p. 74 2. Fink, H., ‘Exhibition Essay’ in  Bronwyn Oliver (1959 – 2006), Roslyn Oxley9, Sydney, 2006, see: www.roslynoxley9.com.au/exhibition/bronwyn-oliver-1959-2006/46saa 3. ibid. 4. ibid. 5. Natasha Bullock cited in Bond, A. and Tunnicliffe, W., (eds.),  Contemporary: Art Gallery of New South Wales Contemporary Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2006, p. 326 VERONICA ANGELATOS © Estate of Bronwyn Oliver. Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • Bronwyn Oliver, (1959-2006), Dirigible, 1989, copper, 45 x 35 x 25 cm
          May. 21, 2024

          Bronwyn Oliver, (1959-2006), Dirigible, 1989, copper, 45 x 35 x 25 cm

          Est: $10,000 - $15,000

          Bronwyn Oliver (1959-2006) Dirigible, 1989 copper

          Shapiro Auctioneers
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, LINK II, 1993
          Apr. 24, 2024

          BRONWYN OLIVER, LINK II, 1993

          Est: $80,000 - $120,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) LINK II, 1993 copper 30.0 x 69.0 x 21.0 cm PROVENANCE Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above in 1993 EXHIBITED Bronwyn Oliver, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 21 July – 7 August 1993 LITERATURE Fenner, F.,  Bronwyn Oliver Mnemonic Chords, Moët et Chandon, Epernay, France, 1995, pp. 6, 24 (illus.) RELATED WORK Link, 1993, copper, 30.0 x 75.0 x 25.0 cm, in Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 219 ESSAY The solid swollen form of Bronwyn Oliver’s copper Link II, 1993, corralled into a single sinusoidal wave segment, twists and strains with impressive physical tension. The warm verdigris patina and sinewy fluting of its surface allude to an unseen living form enclosed within this tapered carapace. As the title suggests, Link II might have been extracted from a larger whole – simplified to the smallest unit of life, an abstract building amoebic or cellular building block – ‘an almost involuntary, or purely animal force.’1 Fashioning an object that echoes primordial organic forms and animating its surface with repeating geometric patterns, Oliver adds Link II to the myriad enclosed seed forms of her oeuvre. Their rigid shells, either tightly woven and impregnable, rhythmically perforated or decoratively latticed in filigree copper wire, all contain a secret void – this invisible potential conveying an enduring possibility of metamorphosis.  Link II is covered with haptic webbed ridges, which run like veins along its planar surface, branching out and dovetailing to follow the rotational torsion of the sculpture’s overall curved structure. Although Link II is entirely enclosed, made with ribbons of plate copper rather than woven from coils of thin copper wire, its solidity is not impermeable. Like Breather and Halo – both from 1993, and also exhibited in Oliver’s exhibition at Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery in July that same year – the pale green surface of Link II’s shell is perforated. Contained within each bordered sliver, its irregular perforations are of varying diameters, although none are large enough to offer a glimpse inside Link II’s inky cavity. Hannah Fink, in her 2017 monograph on the artist, explains that Oliver had inherited through her education at Alexander Mackie College Lyndon Dadswell’s concept of space flowing through a sculpture.2 While the small apertures in Link II’s surface allow the sculpture to ‘breathe’, they provide precious little airflow through the sculpture’s form, in complete contrast to the delicate woven open-form works that Oliver had begun to create, and which would characterise much of the work throughout the remainder of her career.  The single twist of Link II’s tapered form references an early work by Oliver – Cloud, 1987, made from cane, paper and fibreglass resin, and exhibited in the 10th Mildura Sculpture Triennial. In the catalogue for this exhibition, Oliver described the formal concerns which had fed into the artwork’s construction: ‘The inner form I fabricated as a spiralling mass around a central axis. I cut the oval-shaped holes over the surface in an attempt to ‘dissolve’ the form. The holes were cut following the same spiralling curve as the form itself to try and emphasise a revolving movement.’ 3 Although Link II’s perforations do not attempt to suggest a physical dissolution, Oliver’s use of surface details to animate a static form, to endow it with an implied rotational potential, has clearly remained an enduring creative challenge. An applied chemical patina of verdigris creates for Link II an aura of weathered preciousness, its uneven application evoking the effects of the passage of time. A product of Oliver’s mature formal experimentations, Link II’s powerful presence expresses contradictory impulses of constriction and extension, concealment and revelation. 1. Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver. Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 107 2. Ibid, p. 51  3. The artist cited in 10th Mildura Sculpture Triennial 1988, Mildura Arts Centre, Mildura, 1988, cat. 95, np. LUCIE REEVES-SMITH © Estate of Bronwyn Oliver. Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley 9 Gallery, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Sun (2004) copper 104 x 104 x 12 cm
          Apr. 17, 2024

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Sun (2004) copper 104 x 104 x 12 cm

          Est: $400,000 - $600,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Sun (2004) copper 104 x 104 x 12 cm PROVENANCE Bronwyn Oliver, Sydney Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private Collection, Sydney, acquired from the above in 2004 EXHIBITED Bronwyn Oliver, Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne, 17 November - 11 December 2004, no. no. 7, illustrated (cover) LITERATURE Hannah Fink, Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 221

          Smith & Singer
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Acorn 2005
          Mar. 27, 2024

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Acorn 2005

          Est: $60,000 - $80,000

          PROPERTY FROM THE ESTATE OF MR RODNEY MENZIES, MELBOURNE BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Acorn 2005 copper 60.0 x 45.0 x 45.0 cm

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, BUD, 2003
          Aug. 16, 2023

          BRONWYN OLIVER, BUD, 2003

          Est: $80,000 - $120,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) BUD, 2003 copper 36.0 x 57.0 x 36.0 cm PROVENANCE Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, commissioned by Gary Sands, Queensland Christie’s, Sydney, 24 May 2005, lot 45 (as 'Pod') Private collection, Sydney LITERATURE Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 220 RELATED WORK Bud II, 2004, 115.0 x 95.0 x 95.0 cm, MONA Collection, Tasmania, illus. ibid., pp. 172-173 ESSAY Today recognised as one of Australia's foremost contemporary artists, the late sculptor Bronwyn Oliver produced an extraordinary body of copper works of poised elegance, evoking the timeless organic forms of the natural world and animated with repeating geometric patterns and taut physical tension. In 1999, Oliver had received her first major sculptural commission from the City of Sydney, for which she created a pair of oversized seed forms made of welded copper, Palm and Magnolia (Royal Botanic Gardens, Sydney). Following the public success of these sculptures, in the early 2000s she experienced a flurry of private commissions for similar works in closed spherical and ovoidal volumes, realised in monumental dimensions to be installed in gardens while others remained in an intimate and domestic scale.1 Bud, 2003, is one such work, a delicately tapered ovoid vessel, its latticed filigree copper surface is fluted with symmetrical spiral ribbing - these pronounced ridges animating the static sculpture with an implied rotational potential. This effect characterised many of Oliver’s most successful closed-form works of the period, including Magnolia (1999), Twill, (2001), Entwine (2001) and Tracery (2003), most following a vertical droplet shape. The perforated transparency of Oliver’s fretwork provides a contrasting tension between the appearance of rigid carapace and the void enclosed within, through which the sculpture breathes. For the artist, the seed form was employed as a sign of new beginnings, conveying the possibility of metamorphosis, the potential of an unseen life force to break free from its cocoon.   Oliver’s sculptures, although often bearing mimetic titles such as bud, pod, chrysalis and shell, are not about nature, instead their appearances are shaped by the conceptual power of natural forms and the effects of their shape and volume in physical space that surrounds them - breathing and moving in three dimensions. In describing her most successful works, Bronwyn Oliver remarked that with a perfect combination of concept, medium and execution, the sculpture would ‘sing’, and using a ‘poetry of association’, would transcend conventional markers of time and space.2 The instinct to grapple with poetic associations is human, and a carefully laid trap that Bronwyn Oliver, as Arachne, has woven for her audience. Self-contained, Bud twists and concertinas, its shining woven copper threads and tendrils glowing with internal and reflected warmth and inviting tactility. Presenting a sense of wholeness, its enigmatic existence remains unquestioned and immutable, as though Bud had appeared in this world fully formed. This elegance and masterful resolution, however, belies the punishing, labour-intensive process to which Oliver was so rapturously committed - the painstakingly manipulated twisting and welds of pliant copper wire here creating an intricate ‘weave': the microstructure of her organic sculptural form, open and geometric, allowing light to permeate and magnify its decorative surface patterns.   Created in 2003, Bud is an immaculate artefact from the abundantly productive apogee of Oliver’s career. Having relinquished her teaching job the year before, the artist threw herself into producing work for private commissions, including the monumental Tracery, 2003 and commencing her most ambitious sculpture, the 16.5m suspended Vine in the atrium of the Sydney Hilton Hotel.   1.    Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver – Strange Things, Paper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 136 2.    Sturgeon, G., Contemporary Australian Sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991, pp. 73 – 74   LUCIE REEVES-SMITH © Estate of Bronwyn Oliver. Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley 9 Gallery, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, SASH, 1994
          Dec. 01, 2022

          BRONWYN OLIVER, SASH, 1994

          Est: $50,000 - $70,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) SASH, 1994 copper 28.0 x 193.0 x 11.5 cm PROVENANCE Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Western Mining Corporation, Melbourne BHP Billiton, Melbourne, acquired within WMC Collection, June 2005 Sotheby’s, Melbourne, 24 November 2008, lot 1 Private collection, Sydney EXHIBITED Recent Work by Bronwyn Oliver, The 1994 Moët & Chandon Fellow, Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne, 21 October - 16 November 1995, cat. 5 LITERATURE Fink, H.,  Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 114 ESSAY With a fabric made of ruched sheet metal tightly bound with riveted struts, the long and narrow swag that is Sash, 1994 twists and strains, the warmth of its patinated copper evoking a living form enclosed within its sheathed package. This sculpture belongs to a small group of self-contained closed forms within Bronwyn Oliver’s oeuvre of latticed copper wire sculptures, poignantly evoking the artist’s own sense of geographical dislocation and protective remove. This sculpture also, however, conveys the possibility of metamorphosis, the potential of an unseen life force to break free of its cocoon. There is a rich history of wrapped and bound forms in Western Art, from Michelangelo’s sculptures of bound slaves to Christo’s contemporary environmental interventions1, often illustrating tensions between constriction and escape, concealment and unveiling. This dichotomy has been a persistent thread within Bronwyn Oliver’s practice. Getting Through, one of her early performance pieces during a bush retreat with Marina Abramovic and Ulay in August 1981, featured Oliver trapped within a phonebooth, tied up with ropes. From within Oliver attempted to call her peers, asking them to release her binds from the outside. Many years later, Oliver’s series of closed form ‘Mute’ sculptures were similarly impregnable, containing a secret void within, tightly shielded from outside intervention. Sash was created in Hautvillers, a village in Épernay, France, during Bronwyn Oliver’s year-long residency between 1994 – 1995. She had been the first sculptor to win the Moët & Chandon Art Fellowship some months earlier. By then, already one of Australia’s finest contemporary sculptors, Oliver had a dedicated following of private collectors and erudite critics. Armed with the tools of her trade and an unfortunately insufficient grasp of the French language, Oliver arrived in Épernay with the determined intention to ‘concentrate on my work away from my commitments. I can experiment with new techniques. I hope to get a forge there. This is not a year to waste.’2 It was only towards the end of her stay that she was able to fulfil this wish, with a delivery of oxyacetylene equipment allowing experimentation with sheet metal as opposed to copper shim, described by the artist as a ‘relief after weeks of fine, detailed concentration to be able to swing a hammer over an anvil.’3 Oliver has laboriously sewn and stitched the skin of this sculpture with fire and a rivet gun, endowing the warm material with a haptic quality of folded cloth. This quality is further magnified by the contrast between an uneven crystalline patination against Oliver’s regular criss-crossed binds. In describing her most successful works, Bronwyn Oliver remarked that with a perfect combination of concept, medium and execution, the sculpture would ‘sing’, and using a ‘poetry of association’, would transcend conventional markers of time and space.4 The instinct to grapple with poetic associations is human, and a carefully laid trap that Bronwyn Oliver, as Ariadne, has woven for her audience. She drew inspiration from organic matter, prehistoric and ancient artefacts, and through a manipulation of surface texture and colour, was able to ‘incorporate the element of time’5 in her copper forms. The works of this small series all share a pleated surface inspired by a ‘dreadful sculpture seen at the Musée d’Orsay in 1990 – 91, a sculpture of a gladiator, in bronze, wearing ruched leggings, with musculature taut beneath the surface of the cloth.’6 Evoking an abandoned archaeological hoard or an ancient bundle of possessions wrapped for ease of carrying, Sash also expresses the nomadic transience of Oliver’s brief but stimulating sojourn in France. 1. Ian Howard, Oliver’s first art teacher, recalls having given a talk in Inverell on the subject of Christo’s Little Bay project in 1969, when he first met Oliver as a child. Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver – Strange Things, Paper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 11 2. The artist cited in Owen, S., ‘Career by Default’, The Sun-Herald, 13 February 1994, p. 142 3. The artist cited in Fink, op. cit., p. 114 4. Sturgeon, G., Contemporary Australian Sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991, pp. 73 – 74 5. Oliver, B., ‘A Contemporary Australian Artist in France’, Explorations, The Institute for the Study of French-Australian Relations, Melbourne, December 1990, p. 27 6. The artist, cited in Bunyan, M., ‘Review of The Sculpture of Bronwyn Oliver at TarraWarra Museum of Art’, Art Blart, 28 January 2017 LUCIE REEVES-SMITH

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, CORONA, 1993
          May. 04, 2022

          BRONWYN OLIVER, CORONA, 1993

          Est: $60,000 - $80,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) CORONA, 1993 copper wire 32.0 cm diameter PROVENANCE Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Sydney LITERATURE Fenner, F., Bronwyn Oliver Mnemonic Chords, Moet et Chandon, Epernay, France, 1995, pp. 5, 21 (illus.) Murray-Cree, L.,  Awesome! Australian Art for Contemporary Kids, Craftsman House, Melbourne, c. 2002, pp. 86 – 87 (illus.) Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 219  ESSAY ‘Each of Oliver's works emits a whisper of familiarity and flickering voice of humour and optimism. At a deeper level, they strike an emotional chord in viewers hardened by the cynicism of much contemporary art practice. The poetic resonance of her deftly imaginative and delightfully quirky creations provides rare moments of reprieve from today's didactic obsession with lobbying socio-political issues. There is no sarcastic commentary, modernist, psychoanalytical or feminist deconstruction informing Oliver's work. Each piece is offered as a holistic entity, its layers of association emerging gradually through the process of looking.’1 One of Australia's most innovative contemporary sculptors, Bronwyn Oliver remains celebrated for her extraordinary ability to produce meticulously articulated works of immense beauty and grace that unite timeless, organic forms of the natural world with the abstract logic of geometry. As elucidated by Hannah Fink in her introduction to the artist's exhibition at Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery in July 2006, '...Bronwyn was modest, yet utterly sure of her vision, secure in the confidence of her originality. Her art was fully resolved – perfect, really – and she stands alone in the annals of Australian art history. There was no-one like her: she invented her own deeply intelligent form and entered fully into the world that it opened out to her.'2 Simple yet complicated, fragile yet strong, eccentric though at the same time oddly straightforward, Corona, 1993 is a superb example of Oliver's delicately woven copper and bronze assemblages that universally surprise and inspire – beguiling both the eye and mind through their enigmatic presence. Bearing the patinated hallmarks of her early explorations, the sculpture emanates an ethereal, almost cosmic aura – alluding perhaps, as the title suggests, to a radiant sun with the delicate, elongated strands protruding from the circular body conjuring the outermost part of its atmosphere, only visible during an eclipse. Notwithstanding such connotations with the natural world however, ultimately the piece embodies its own eternal presence or life; as Oliver herself so fervently asserted of her objectives, ‘I am trying to create life. Not in the sense of beings, or animals, or plants, or machines, but "life" in the sense of a kind of force, a presence, an energy in my objects that human beings can respond to on the level of soul or spirit.'3  With their tactility and anatomical physicality, such intricately executed forms inevitably elicit a temptation to touch, reminding us that the world is a corporeal place. Yet too often the easy, sensuous curves of Oliver's objects belie the punishing, labour-intensive process to which the artist was so passionately committed. Inspired by the patina of age and veneration shared by ancient relics and humble artefacts, Oliver would painstakingly manipulate dizzying twistings and welds of pliant copper wire to create the 'weave' – the microstructure of her organic sculptural forms which gradually became more open and geometric to allow light to permeate and exaggerate their optical aspect. Indeed, the shadows cast by her objects are so intrinsic to the formalist geometry of each piece that at times the shadow itself almost becomes more powerful... becomes the object. As Amanda Rowell mused in her introduction to Oliver's exhibition at Roslyn Oxley Gallery in September 2004, '...the microcosmic, complex surface of an Oliver sculpture is an interface between the macroform of its overall shape and the internal cavity or void where the sculpture breathes. The ease of connection between these three formal aspects of her works, along with their gently mimetic character - as alluded by their titles constitute their elegance and simple pleasure...'4 1. Fenner, F., Bronwyn Oliver: Mnemonic Chords, Moet et Chandon, Epernay, France, 1995, p. 4 2. Bronwyn Oliver (1959 - 2006), 10 July 2006, see http://www.roslynoxley9.com.au/news/ releases/2006/07/10/112/ 3. Oliver cited in Sturgeon, G., Contemporary Australian Sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991, p. 71 4. Bronwyn Oliver 2004, 9 September 2004, see http://www.roslynoxley9.com.au/news/releases/2004/09/08/80/ VERONICA ANGELATOS © Estate of Bronwyn Oliver. Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley 9 Gallery, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, SPIRAL II, 1988
          Nov. 10, 2021

          BRONWYN OLIVER, SPIRAL II, 1988

          Est: $10,000 - $15,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) SPIRAL II, 1988 Nos 5 & 6 from the SPIRAL II series of eight impressions emboss of copper sculpture on paper 65.0 x 50.0 cm (each sheet) each signed and numbered lower right: Bronwyn Oliver 5/8 and Bronwyn Oliver 6/8 PROVENANCE Estate of the artist, Sydney Company collection, Sydney EXHIBITED The Sculpture of Bronwyn Oliver, Tarrawarra Museum of Art, Victoria, 19 November 2016 – 5 February 2017 (as ‘Spiral II’, listed in exhibition catalogue) LITERATURE Fink, H.,  Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 218 © Estate of Bronwyn Oliver. Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley 9 Gallery, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, LUNAR, 2001
          Nov. 10, 2021

          BRONWYN OLIVER, LUNAR, 2001

          Est: $65,000 - $85,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959 - 2006) LUNAR, 2001 copper on a wooden plinth 28.5 cm height inscribed with title, date and artist's name at base: ‘Lunar’ 2001 / Bronwyn Oliver PROVENANCE Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private collection, Sydney Deutscher and Hackett, Melbourne, 26 August 2009, lot 6 Private collection, Canberra EXHIBITED Bronwyn Oliver, Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne, 24 November – 21 December 2001 (illus. on exhibition invitation) RELATED WORK Globe, 2002, copper, 300.0 cm diameter, in the collection of the University of New South Wales, Sydney  ESSAY I think about sculpture as a kind of physical poetry, and I construct my sculpture like constructing sentences, in the sense that I try to exclude associations that are clouding the centre and leave in only associations that add meaning to the core.’1 As one of the country's leading and most celebrated sculptors, Bronwyn Oliver has left behind an important legacy. Her oeuvre presents perfectly resolved, organic sculptures predominantly in patinated copper and bronze. The highly skilled and painstaking craftsmanship involved in this process conveys the unbridled passion and commitment Oliver had for her practice. There is an inherent transparency and softness to these resilient unyielding structures. Like veins in a leaf, an intricate system of copper is woven together to form an impeccable whole. Oliver was able to successfully tame this seemingly immutable medium, melding and stylising it to form a unique sculptural lexicon; unmatched and exclusively hers. Rhythmical waves, curves, wreaths, cylindrical spheres and cell-like structures mimic forms from the sea such as shells, amoeba, driftwood, tentacles, or braided seaweed not unlike the similar influence located in the architecture and interior design of Antoni Gaudí, inspired also by the aquamarine milieu. Furthermore, there is an undeniable reference to astronomical and cosmic macro phenomena, to forms that inhabit the great ocean of outer space. Specifically in  Lunar, 2001, hundreds of connected spiralling tendril-like coils are presented in a hollow globe labyrinth leaning off-centre from its axis, thereby alluding to galactical musings. The surface has a remarkable depth as demarcated by the ellipsoid shape. Captivating shadows are cast by Oliver's objects, such as  Lunar, and are an integral part of the work. Intricate patterns become projected and warped as the interplay between light and form is enlivened. This particular work is closely related to the major commissioned outdoor piece Globe, 2002, which is three metres in diameter and on permanent display at the University of New South Wales, Sydney. Fragile yet robust, Oliver’s sculptures such as the present, are sophisticated, elegant and beautiful, embodying an incandescent clarity of vision. As Sebastian Smee recognises: 'As well as having a bold, classical symmetry, her sculptures have a private feeling about them, as of something freshly observed on a solitary walk.’2 1. The artist cited in Fenner, F.,  Bronwyn Oliver, Moet et Chandon, Epernay, France, 1995, n.p. 2. Smee, S., 'Nature of single-minded devotion',  The Australian, 14 July 2006, p. 14 © Estate of Bronwyn Oliver. Courtesy of Roslyn Oxley 9 Gallery, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Shell 2003
          Jun. 27, 2019

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Shell 2003

          Est: $400,000 - $500,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Shell 2003 copper on bronze base 150.0 cm diameter Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private collection, Sydney Menzies, Sydney, 15 December 2010, lot 39 Private collection, Melbourne Menzies, Sydney, 22 March 2012, lot 39 Private collection, Melbourne Menzies, Melbourne, 25 June 2015, lot 37 The private collection of Mr Rodney Menzies

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), UNITY, 2001, copper
          Apr. 10, 2019

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), UNITY, 2001, copper

          Est: $200,000 - $250,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 2006), UNITY, 2001, copper DIMENSIONS: 112.0 cm diameter PROVENANCE: Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Sydney Deutscher and Hackett, Sydney, 1 September 2010, lot 6 Private collection, Melbourne EXHIBITED: Bronwyn Oliver, Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne, 24 November 21 December 2001 (illus. in exhibition catalogue) The Sculpture of Bronwyn Oliver, Tarrawarra Museum of Art, Victoria, 19 November 2016 5 February 2017 LITERATURE: Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver:Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, pp. 158 (illus.), 212 213 (illus. installation), 220 McDonald, J., ‘Arts’, Sydney Morning Herald, Sydney, 10 January 2017 ESSAY: ‘...Bronwyn Oliver had that rarest of all skills:she knew how to create beauty... Her art was fully resolved - perfect, really - and she stands alone in the annals of Australian art history. There was no-one like her: she invented her own deeply intelligent form, and entered fully into the world that it opened out to her...’1 One of Australia's most highly regarded contemporary sculptors, Bronwyn Oliver remains celebrated for her extraordinary ability to produce meticulously articulated works of immense beauty and grace which unite timeless, organic forms of the natural world with the abstract logic of geometry. Simple yet complicated, fragile yet strong, eccentric though at the same time oddly straightforward, her delicately woven copper and bronze assemblages such as Unity, 2001 universally surprise and inspire beguiling both the eye and mind through their enigmatic presence. With their tactility and anatomical physicality, such intricately executed forms moreover inevitably elicit a temptation to touch - the sensual, prehistorically-scaled versions of natural phenomena thus reminding us that the world is a corporeal place. Yet too often the easy, voluptuous curves of Oliver's objects belie the punishing, labour-intensive process to which the artist was so passionately committed. Inspired by the patina of age and veneration shared by ancient relics and humble artefacts, Oliver would painstakingly manipulate dizzying twistings and welds of pliant copper wire to create the ‘weave’ the microstructure of her organic sculptural forms which gradually became more open and geometric to allow light to permeate and exaggerate their optical aspect. ‘Bronwyn’s sculpture belongs to a genealogy of female art: to the open grids of Agnes Martin, the looping, webbed and netted painted surfaces of Emily Kngwarreye and Yayoi Kusama, the undulating fields of Bridget Riley and Rosalie Gascoigne works of art which occur in Julia Kristeva’s ‘Women’s Time’: fluid, cyclic, edgeless, eternal.2 As Amanda Rowell muses in her introduction to Oliver's exhibition at Roslyn Oxley Gallery in September 2004, ‘...the microcosmic, complex surface of an Oliver sculpture is an interface between the macroform of its overall shape and the internal cavity or void where the sculpture breathes. The ease of connection between these three formal aspects of her works, along with their gently mimetic character - as alluded by their titles - constitute their elegance and simple pleasure...’2 1. Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver (1959 - 2006), Obituary, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 10 July 2006, see http: //www.roslynoxley9.com.au/news/releases/2006/07/10/112/ 2. Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 207 3. Bronwyn Oliver 2004, 9 September 2004, see http: //www.roslynoxley9.com.au/news/releases/2004/09/08/80/ VERONICA ANGELATOS

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Acorn 2005
          Mar. 28, 2019

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Acorn 2005

          Est: $80,000 - $100,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Acorn 2005 copper 60.0 x 45.0 x 45.0 cm The artist Thence by descent, private collection, Sydney Menzies, Sydney, 11 May 2017, lot 31 Company collection, Melbourne Bronwyn Oliver (1959-2006), Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 10 August - 2 September 2006 Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver: Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, p.221 (illus. pp.203, 205)

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Stem 2005
          Aug. 09, 2018

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Stem 2005

          Est: $130,000 - $160,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Stem 2005 195.0 x 20.0 x 20.0 cm copper

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER , (1959 – 2006), CLUSTER, 2002 , copper
          Apr. 18, 2018

          BRONWYN OLIVER , (1959 – 2006), CLUSTER, 2002 , copper

          Est: $25,000 - $35,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER , (1959 – 2006), CLUSTER, 2002 , copper DIMENSIONS: 22.0 cm diameter PROVENANCE: Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above in 2002 EXHIBITED: Bronwyn Oliver, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 21 November – 12 December 2002 LITERATURE: Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver, Strange Things, Piper Press, Sydney, 2017, pp. 164 (illus.), 220

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 – 2006), BLUE MOON, 1990, copper and lead
          Apr. 18, 2018

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 – 2006), BLUE MOON, 1990, copper and lead

          Est: $35,000 - $45,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 – 2006), BLUE MOON, 1990, copper and lead DIMENSIONS: 60.0 cm height PROVENANCE: Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private collection, Sydney EXHIBITED: Bronwyn Oliver, Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne, 9 September – 8 October 1992 The Sculpture of Bronwyn Oliver, TarraWarra Museum of Art, Victoria, 19 November 2016 – 5 February 2017 LITERATURE: Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver, Strange Things, Piper Press , Sydney, 2017, pp. 72 (illus.), 77 (illus. with the artist), 219 ESSAY: Encrusted with a crystalline patina, Blue Moon, 1990 has the aura of an ancient relic retrieved from the watery depths of the ocean floor. Was Oliver playing on the enduring symbiotic relationship between the moon and the sea, or perhaps there is something futuristic and sinister in the tightly wound copper coils and protruding claws of this crescent? The instinct to grapple with such poetic associations is human, and the result of a carefully laid trap that Bronwyn Oliver, as Ariadne, has woven for her audience. Blue Moon was the final work Oliver completed during her 6-month Power Bequest Studio residency in Paris, at the Cité Internationale des Arts, from November 1989 to June 1990.1 Bearing the patinated hallmarks of her early explorations into woven wired forms, Blue Moon absorbs and emanates energy. Its forms are twisted, swaddled and moulded by Oliver’s obsessive creative energy, and in turn, its ancient form radiates an ethereal and cosmic aura. There is a sublime contradiction in the shadows that are cast from this construction. The light that the moon radiates is not its own, but merely a reflection of the sun’s energy. However, this moon casts only a shadow. Furthermore, a blue moon is the second full moon in a calendar month, yet this sculpture has a crescent shaped form more like a waxing or waning gibbous moon. In using the word ‘blue’ in the title, the sculptor instead draws attention to the work’s patina, while eliciting notions of rarity and preciousness in the viewer’s mind. This sculpture, like a great number of Oliver’s works, conveys the idea of metamorphosis. With titles such as Comet, Hatchery, Husk and Survivor, the sculptures from this period adopted forms that expressed these liminal states of being, often echoing protective shells and cocoons. Many of these woven creations were constructed around a central wooden or paper armature that would later be burnt away. Copper wire, when wound in coils like the ones that bind the structure of this irregular crescent, is also used to conduct electricity, endowing Blue Moon with an energy that is undeniably modern. Whilst in Paris, Oliver was contacted by Graeme Sturgeon, an authority on Australian sculpture, who was in the process of compiling a survey of contemporary Australian sculptors and their work. Oliver’s answers to his questions provide vital insight into her mindset and ambitions at this point in her career. In describing her most successful works, she remarked that with a perfect combination of concept, medium and execution, the sculpture would ’sing’, and using a ’poetry of association’, would transcend conventional markers of time and space.2 The transcendental and universal quality of Oliver’s sculptures relies on the enduring power of her organic shapes. While Oliver denied any clear naturalistic inspiration in her work, her manipulation of materials inevitably brought her to the circular, spiral and crescent forms that are so prevalent in the natural world. The impetus that drove her work was ontological, coming directly from the materials themselves and the structures they could come to embody. However, Oliver was offended by critics’ tendency to associate her work with women’s craft,3 hoping instead that her work sat somewhere between the organic and the artisanal. Despite her unwavering commitment and dedication to her sculptures, Oliver’s forms are imperfect, bearing the traces of her creative effort. But as Oliver conceded, ’evidence of the struggle – that’s what makes it human’.4 1. Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver – Strange Things, Paper Press, Sydney, 2017, p. 80 2. Sturgeon, G., Contemporary Australian Sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991, p. 73 – 74 3. The artist cited in Fink, H., op. cit., p. 72 ‘I feel that references to the craft aspect of my work trivialises my intentions. The craft of making is only important in the service of an idea’. 4. op. cit., p. 64 LUCIE REEVES-SMITH

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Hook 1991
          Nov. 30, 2017

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Hook 1991

          Est: $15,000 - $20,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Hook 1991 BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Hook 1991 bronze and copper wire, 60.0 x 50.0 x 3.0 cm , , Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Victoria Bronwyn Oliver: Recent Sculptures, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 5 June - 22 June 1991

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Spiral V 2002
          Aug. 10, 2017

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Spiral V 2002

          Est: $180,000 - $260,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Spiral V 2002, BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Spiral V 2002, copper 298.0 cm length Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, Private collection, United States of America

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Acorn 2005
          May. 11, 2017

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Acorn 2005

          Est: $70,000 - $90,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006), Acorn 2005 copper 60.0 x 45.0 x 45.0 cm The artist Thence by descent, private collection, Sydney, since 2006 Bronwyn Oliver (1959-2006), Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 10 August - 2 September 2006

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 – 2006), BLAZE, 2003, copper
          May. 10, 2017

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 – 2006), BLAZE, 2003, copper

          Est: $150,000 - $200,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 – 2006), BLAZE, 2003, copper DIMENSIONS: 100.0 cm diameter PROVENANCE: Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private collection, Sydney (commissioned from the above) ESSAY: Blaze, 2003 is as its creator was: an awe-inspiring, radiating comet of energy, both delicate and fleeting. Hypnotic and extraordinarily intricate, Blaze is constructed of a matrix of welded copper threads in Bronwyn Oliver’s signature mature style. Oliver was a unique sculptor in the Australian art world, having more stylistic and technical affinity with members of the New British Sculpture movement under whom she had studied at the Chelsea School of Art between 1982 – 84, such as Richard Deacon and Martin Puryear. Her art is completely confident in style and execution, lyrical in its sensibility and loyal to its inner logic. A famously fastidious artist, Oliver was renowned for her work ethic, working tirelessly to breathe life-force into her industrial materials, endowing them with a surprisingly organic appearance. Oliver’s choice of materials is not to be overlooked. She was remarkable in having chosen physically demanding and long-lasting metals at a time when many of her peers were toying with ephemeral materials and forms. Having moved away from the cane and paper works that had won her early critical acclaim, Oliver devoted her work almost entirely to the medium of copper, creating filigree nets of repeating teardrop forms. The finesse of these closely knit patterns invites quiet contemplation and appreciation. Oliver’s forms are governed by a series of apparent physical contradictions which reveal themselves to an attentive viewer – between fragility and strength, simplicity and intricacy, uniqueness and universality. Blaze is no exception to this complex game of physical contradictions. Its forms are majestic and theatrical. Bordered by a series of overlapping spikes radiating from its centre, Blaze inspires outward awe and appreciation from a distance, much like the radiating warmth of our sun. The finely wrought net that comprises the central ring of this artwork seems to absorb the gaze into the void within its centre. This centrifugal force, drawing light, depth and attention within the centre of the work is counteracted by the elaborate centripetal force created by Blaze’s radiating spikes. Oliver revelled in the structural formation of her works. Her unique formal vocabulary appeared to be inspired by the archetypal shapes of the natural world: pods, spirals, tendrils and vessels. Throughout her career these forms seem to evolve with the internal development that would have delighted 20th century Swiss art historian Heinrich Wöfflin. However, Oliver’s ideas did not stem from the observation of natural forms, instead her practice took for its subject the act of creation itself – a sincere investigation of her materials and the way she chose to manipulate them. In reality, these organic, universal forms that seem to encapsulate metaphorical potential of life were born of Oliver’s painstaking process of welding and forging. The result is self-assured, sincere and bears lasting power. LUCIE REEVES-SMITH

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Clasp 2006
          Feb. 09, 2017

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Clasp 2006

          Est: $130,000 - $160,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Clasp 2006, copper, 215.0 x 20.0 x 20.0 cm

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), LICK, c.1991, copper
          Nov. 30, 2016

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), LICK, c.1991, copper

          Est: $100,000 - $140,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), LICK, c.1991, copper DIMENSIONS: 230.0 cm length PROVENANCE: Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Melbourne ESSAY: '‘When the ideas, the formal elements and the medium all work together, a sculpture will ‘'sing'’ with a kind of rightness. It takes on a life, a presence, which is removed from this world. It belongs to a mythical other life, without a place in time.’'1 One of Australia'’s most highly acclaimed and innovative sculptors, Bronwyn Oliver remains celebrated for her extraordinary ability to produce meticulously articulated works of immense beauty and grace that unite timeless, organic forms of the natural world with the abstract logic of geometry. As writer Hannah Fink poignantly observed upon the artist'’s untimely passing in 2006, '‘Bronwyn Oliver had that rarest of all skills: she knew how to create beauty. She was modest, yet utterly sure of her vision, secure in the confidence of her originality. Her art was fully resolved - perfect, really - and she stands alone in the annals of Australian art history. There was no-one like her: she invented her own deeply intelligent form, and entered fully into the world that it opened out to her...'2 Simple yet complicated, fragile yet strong, eccentric though at the same time oddly straightforward, Lick, 1991 is a consummate example of Oliver'’s delicately woven copper and bronze assemblages that universally surprise and inspire - beguiling both the eye and the mind through their enigmatic presence and mesmerising tactility. Bearing strong stylistic affinities with other horizontal sculptures by the artist, including Curlicue, 1991, Inscription, 2000, Idiom, 2001 and Trace, 2001 (National Gallery of Australia, Canberra) - all of which mimic the stroke of a pen as it scrawls text across a page - Lick features a similarly lyrical, rhythmic form, as intimated by its title. Alluding to the quick movement of a tongue or more metaphorically, the hasty application of paint with a brush, indeed the organic sculptural form seems to possess a life force of its own, a fluid energy that derives from the painstakingly manipulated twists and welds of pliant copper which repeatedly coil and recoil to create the ‘weave’ microstructure that is the hallmark of Oliver’'s art. Integral to this duality between that which is immobile and inert, yet also active and dynamic, are the intricate shadows cast by Oliver’s sculpture - an optical aspect so fundamental to the formalist geometry of the work that at times the shadow itself almost becomes more powerful… becomes the object. As Natasha Bullock, elucidating precisely this interplay, observes ‘…'in the exchange between these aspects, Oliver’'s sculpture suggests a passage from one place to another, a journey from a material dimension into an imaginative other world.'’3 Elegant and refined, Lick exemplifies well Oliver'’s unique legacy of beauty and wonder, strength and life - her skillful mastery of form, space and material to create flawless sculptural works that, although unmistakably contemporary in their construction, simultaneously betray a timeless, ethereal quality that resonates deeply with the human soul. 1. The artist cited in Sturgeon, G., ‘Bronwyn Oliver’, Contemporary Australian Sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991 p. 74 2. Fink, H., catalogue essay for Bronwyn Oliver (1959 - 2006), Roslyn Oxley9, Sydney, 10 August - 2 September 2006, n.p. 3. Bullock, N., in Bond, A. and Tunnicliffe, W., (eds.), Contemporary: Art Gallery of New South Wales Contemporary Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2006, p. 326 VERONICA ANGELATOS

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), DIRIGIBLE, 1989, copper
          Sep. 13, 2016

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), DIRIGIBLE, 1989, copper

          Est: $10,000 - $15,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), DIRIGIBLE, 1989, copper DIMENSIONS: 45.0 x 35.0 x 25.0 cm PROVENANCE: Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Canada Private collection, Melbourne EXHIBITED: Bronwyn Oliver, Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 1993 Bronwyn Oliver Sculpture 1986 - 1993, Orange Regional Gallery, Orange, New South Wales, 6 May - 29 May 1994 (touring exhibition)

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • Bronwyn Oliver (1959-2006)
          May. 17, 2016

          Bronwyn Oliver (1959-2006)

          Est: $15,000 - $25,000

          Bronwyn Oliver (1959-2006) Band, 1996 copper

          Shapiro Auctioneers
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), TWIST, 1991, copper
          Aug. 26, 2015

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), TWIST, 1991, copper

          Est: $70,000 - $90,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER, (1959 - 2006), TWIST, 1991, copper DIMENSIONS: 180.0 cm (length) EXHIBITED: Bronwyn Oliver, Fabrications, Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tamaki, Auckland, 7 July - 20 August 1992, cat. 3 An Australian artist's project organised by the Auckland City Art Gallery supported by the Australia/ New Zealand Foundation. PROVENANCE: Private collection, New Zealand ESSAY: One of Australia's most innovative contemporary sculptors, Bronwyn Oliver remains celebrated for her extraordinary ability to produce meticulously articulated works of immense beauty and grace which unite timeless, organic forms of the natural world with the abstract logic of geometry. As elucidated by Hannah Fink in her introduction to the artist's exhibition at Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery in July 2006, '...Bronwyn was modest, yet utterly sure of her vision, secure in the confidence of her originality. Her art was fully resolved - perfect, really - and she stands alone in the annals of Australian art history. There was no-one like her: she invented her own deeply intelligent form, and entered fully into the world that it opened out to her...'1 Simple yet complicated, fragile yet strong, eccentric though at the same time oddly straightforward, Twist, 1991 is a superb example of Oliver's delicately woven copper and bronze assemblages that universally surprise and inspire - beguiling both the eye and mind through their enigmatic presence. With their tactility and anatomical physicality, such intricately executed forms moreover inevitably elicit a temptation to touch - the sensual, prehistorically-scaled versions of natural phenomena thus reminding us that the world is a corporeal place. Yet too often the easy, voluptuous curves of Oliver's objects belie the punishing, labourintensive process to which the artist was so passionately committed. As intimated by the present sculpture's highly apt and expressive title meaning to entwine, coil or wind, Oliver would painstakingly manipulate dizzying twistings and welds of pliant copper wire to create the 'weave' - the microstructure of her organic sculptural forms which gradually became more open and geometric to allow light to permeate and exaggerate their optical aspect. Thus, the shadows cast by her objects - whether flowing spiral and funnel shapes, calligraphic sweeping curves or seed and pod-like spheres - are so intrinsic to the formalist geometry of each piece that at times the shadow itself almost becomes more powerful... becomes the object. As Amanda Rowell poignantly muses, '...the microcosmic, complex surface of an Oliver sculpture is an interface between the macroform of its overall shape and the internal cavity or void where the sculpture breathes. The ease of connection between these three formal aspects of her works, along with their gently mimetic character - as alluded by their titles - constitute their elegance and simple pleasure...'2 1. Fink, H., Bronwyn Oliver (1959-2006), 10 July 2006, exhibition essay for 'Bronwyn Oliver (1959-2006)', Roslyn Oxley9, Sydney, 10 August - 2 September 2006 2. Rowell, A., Bronwyn Oliver 2004, 9 September 2004, exhibition essay for 'Bronwyn Oliver 2004', Roslyn Oxley9, Sydney, 9 September 9 October 2004 VERONICA ANGELATOS

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Trickle (2004) copper
          Aug. 25, 2015

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Trickle (2004) copper

          Est: $120,000 - $160,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Trickle (2004) copper 210 x 50 x 30 cm PROVENANCE Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private Collection, Queensland, acquired from the above on 12 February 2004

          Smith & Singer
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Shell 2003
          Jun. 25, 2015

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Shell 2003

          Est: $400,000 - $500,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Shell 2003 copper on bronze base 150.0 cm diameter

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Boa (2006) copper
          Apr. 28, 2015

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Boa (2006) copper

          Est: $120,000 - $160,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Boa (2006) copper 30 x 225 x 18 cm PROVENANCE Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Mr David Clarke AO, Sydney, acquired from the above on 4 October 2008 The Estate of the Late David Clarke AO, Sydney EXHIBITED Bronwyn Oliver (1959-2006), Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney, 10 August - 2 September 2006, no.11

          Smith & Singer
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, 1959 - 2006, REEL, 1998, copper
          Nov. 26, 2014

          BRONWYN OLIVER, 1959 - 2006, REEL, 1998, copper

          Est: $40,000 - $60,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER, 1959 - 2006, REEL, 1998, copper DIMENSIONS: 52.0 cm diameter PROVENANCE: Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private collection, Sydney 'Bronwyn Oliver's highly idiosyncratic sculpture appropriates and juxtaposes elements from nature and from past and present civilisations, while evoking a multitude of literary and poetic allusions. And as distinctly non-functional, lyrical work devoid of narrative, it ingeniously evades easy categorisation into prevailing pigeon holes of current thought and practice. 'Each of Oliver's works emits a whisper of familiarity and flickering voice of humour and optimism. At a deeper level, they strike an emotional chord in viewers hardened by the cynicism of much contemporary art practice. The poetic resonance of her deftly imaginative and delightfully quirky creations provides rare moments of reprieve from today's didactic obsession with lobbying socio-political issues. There is no sarcastic commentary, modernist, psychoanalytical or feminist deconstruction informing Oliver's work. Each piece is offered as a holistic entity, its layers of association emerging gradually through the process of looking.'1 1. Fenner, F., Bronwyn Oliver: Mnemonic Chords, Moët et Chandon, Epernay, France, 1995, p. 4

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, 1959 - 2006, INSCRIPTION, 2000, copper
          Nov. 26, 2014

          BRONWYN OLIVER, 1959 - 2006, INSCRIPTION, 2000, copper

          Est: $140,000 - $180,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER, 1959 - 2006, INSCRIPTION, 2000, copper DIMENSIONS: 245.0 cm length PROVENANCE: Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private collection, Sydney, acquired from the above in 2000 Bronwyn Oliver's sculptures are wondrous to behold. Inexplicable in their beauty, they are symbols of life and an energy that responds deeply to the soul. Delicately balancing the interplay between light, shadows, depth and air, Oliver's sculptures are fragile yet resilient compositions that are woven together forming a flawless whole. Inscription is an elegant and sinuous example that acts as a ripple of energy, alive and taut with an organic beauty that is distinctive of Oliver's celebrated sculptures. The winding copper form of Inscription possesses a life of its own, alluding to a serpent slithering across a ground or a gnarled twisted branch. There is a fluid movement and a mesmerising cadence that flows through the sculpture like musical notes on a sheet of paper. Belonging to a group of horizontal works which mimic the movement of a pen as it scrawls text across a page, the title Inscription brings to mind old love letters written in cursive, full of emotion and poignancy or perhaps a hastily written note on parchment, expressing an urgent message. Trace, 2001 in the collection of the National Gallery of Australia, Canberra is another example of Oliver's lyrical rhythmic forms that explore the formal language of sculpture. 'In forming letters to make words the pen rises and falls against the paper in a rhythm relating to the meaning of the words and the mind of the writer. Each letter has its own geometry - more narrow in places and more rounded in others - which varies according to its context within a word and its relationship to other letters. The "hand" of the writer can lend a particular poetry of associations to each word - perhaps haste, affection or anger, disappointment and so on.'1 The wall replaces the page as the sculpture moves quietly across the surface as if flowing effortlessly across the page from an invisible hand. Manipulating the copper through her meticulous craftsmanship, Oliver is regarded as one of Australia's most significant contemporary sculptors - 'the delicate friction between surface and depth breathes life into her objects: dense surfaces with translucent and vital interiors of air and light. Her objects are often sphere-like with hollow spaces or openings - openings which lead to somewhere else, devolving from where they started. In the exchange between these aspects, Oliver's sculpture suggests a passage from one place to another, a journey from a material dimension into an imaginative, other world.'2 As demonstrated in Inscription, Oliver leaves behind a legacy of pure beauty, wonder, strength and life. 1. Bronwyn Oliver, quoted on the National Sculpture Prize + Exhibition website viewed 20 October 2014 2. Bullock, N., in Bond, T., and Tunnicliffe, T., (eds), Contemporary: Art Gallery of New South Wales Contemporary Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2006, p. 326 CASSI YOUNG

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER, 1959 - 2006, BLOOM, 1998, copper
          Nov. 26, 2014

          BRONWYN OLIVER, 1959 - 2006, BLOOM, 1998, copper

          Est: $150,000 - $200,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER, 1959 - 2006, BLOOM, 1998, copper DIMENSIONS: 130.0 cm diameter PROVENANCE Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney (Commissioned by Hugh Jamieson, Sydney) Company collection, Sydney As one of Australia's most celebrated artists, Bronwyn Oliver's intricate and enigmatic sculptures are renowned for their distinctive forms of convoluted beauty that are underpinned by numerous contradictions. They are simultaneously fragile yet strong, graceful but complex and full of life and movement despite their immobility. Oliver's delicately woven copper sculptures such as Bloom belong neither to past or present civilisations and are neither mythical nor factual. Timeless in their appearance, they are disconnected from a specific place, object or era and instead suggest a precious life force that connects deeply to the human soul. As the title suggests, Bloom mesmerises like a beautiful flower that has just blossomed. Visions of a radiant sun also come to mind, whilst the elongated strands protruding from the circular body are similar to the spikes of a sea urchin. Alluding to a primordial foreign creature or an overgrown botanical organism, we are not entirely sure what the object is, or what it looks like, but the archaic and enigmatic form exudes familiarity. Comparisons to the natural world are often made with Oliver's sculptures, yet Oliver was never interested in the observation of nature despite the many parallels between her sculptures and various creatures and natural objects.1 Rather, her primary concern was in the structure of materials and the idea of a sculpture taking on its own life. 'I am trying to create life. Not in the sense of beings, or animals, or plants, or machines, but "life" in the sense of a kind of force, a presence, an energy in my objects that human beings can respond to on the level of soul or spirit.'2 This presence is embodied in Bloom through the delicate strands that entwine and expand outwards like a tree searching to lengthen its branches, and the subtle nuances of sexual symbolism which is often inherent in Oliver's works. Here, the seductive gape that leads from the top of the sculpture to the centre exudes a quiet sensual energy. Bloom is an ethereal example of Oliver's flawlessly constructed forms that gracefully balance light, shadow and depth. The sheer beauty of her sculptures often disguise the time consuming and extremely laborious process of Oliver's meticulous craftsmanship that sets her apart from anyone else. As discussed by Hannah Fink in her introduction for Bronwyn Oliver's exhibition at Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery in July 2006, 'Bronwyn was modest yet utterly sure of her vision, secure in the confidence of her originality. Her art was fully resolved - perfect, really - and she stands alone in the annals of Australian art history. There was no-one like her: she invented her own deeply intelligent form, and entered fully into the world that it opened out to her.'3 1. Sturgeon, G., Contemporary Australian sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991, p. 72 2. Oliver, B., quoted in Sturgeon, ibid., p. 71 3. Bronwyn Oliver 2006, 10 July 2006, , viewed 23 September 2014 CASSI YOUNG

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER 1959 - 2006, HUSK, 1994, copper
          Aug. 27, 2014

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959 - 2006, HUSK, 1994, copper

          Est: $16,000 - $20,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959 - 2006, HUSK, 1994, copper DIMENSIONS: 38.0 x 20.0 x 13.0 cm LITERATURE: Fenner, F., Bronwyn Oliver Mnemonic Chords, Moet et Chandon, Epernay, France, 1995, p. 28 (illus.) PROVENANCE: Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private collection, Sydney

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER 1959 - 2006, STRIATION, 2004, copper
          Aug. 27, 2014

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959 - 2006, STRIATION, 2004, copper

          Est: $100,000 - $140,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959 - 2006, STRIATION, 2004, copper DIMENSIONS: 212.0 cm height EXHIBITED: Bronwyn Oliver, Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne, 17 November - 11 December 2004 PROVENANCE: Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private collection, Sydney Twisting and turning in an effortless motion, Striation is an ethereal example of Bronwyn Oliver's flawlessly constructed forms that juxtapose fragility against strength and the familiar against the foreign. Derived from the word stria, the title of this sculpture refers to the parallel 'scratches or tiny grooves on the surface of a rock, resulting from the action of moving ice, as of a glacier'.1 Recreating this natural phenomenon, Oliver has taken these parallel markings and weaved them into an organic form, achieved through an equal partnership between the artist and the independent life of the sculpture. The viewer is drawn to the exposed skeleton of this otherworldly object, alluding to a primordial foreign creature or an overgrown botanical organism. We are not entirely sure what the object is, or what it looks like, but the sensuous curves and the enigmatic form exudes familiarity. Upon closer inspection, it becomes apparent that the evenly spaced copper strands are too perfect for the natural world and as Oliver herself has discussed, she was never interested in the observation of nature, despite the many parallels between her sculptures and various creatures and natural objects.2 Rather, her primary concern was in the structure of materials and the idea of a sculpture taking on its own life. In Striation, Oliver has stripped the ideology and associations of the sculpture down to the bare bones, both in a physical and metaphorical sense, revealing a delicate husk and the life inside. Oliver's creations belong neither to past or present civilisations and are neither mythical nor factual. Timeless in their appearance, they are disconnected from a specific place, object or era and instead suggest a precious life force that connects deeply to the human soul. Manipulating the copper through her meticulous craftsmanship, Oliver is regarded as one of Australia's most significant contemporary sculptors - 'the delicate friction between surface and depth breathes life into her objects: dense surfaces with translucent and vital interiors of air and light. Her objects are often sphere-like with hollow spaces or openings - openings which lead to somewhere else, devolving from where they started. In the exchange between these aspects, Oliver's sculpture suggests a passage from one place to another, a journey from a material dimension into an imaginative, other world.'3 As demonstrated in Striation, Oliver leaves behind a legacy of pure beauty, fragility, strength and life. 1. The Macquarie Dictionary, Macquarie University, New South Wales, 1981, p. 1678 2. Sturgeon, G., Contemporary Australian sculpture, Craftsman House, Sydney, 1991, p. 72 3. Bullock, N., in Bond, T., and Tunnicliffe, T. (eds), Contemporary: Art Gallery of New South Wales Contemporary Collection, Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney, 2006, p. 326 CASSI YOUNG

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Plait (2005) copper
          Aug. 26, 2014

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Plait (2005) copper

          Est: $60,000 - $80,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER 1959-2006 Plait (2005) copper 205 x 22 x 22 cm PROVENANCE Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Sydney Private Collection, Sydney, acquired from the above

          Smith & Singer
        • Bronwyn Oliver 1959-2006 ELEMENT (2005) copper
          May. 14, 2013

          Bronwyn Oliver 1959-2006 ELEMENT (2005) copper

          Est: $45,000 - $55,000

          Bronwyn Oliver 1959-2006 ELEMENT (2005) copper 50 X 50 X 50CM PROVENANCE Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne Private Collection, Melbourne PROPERTY FROM A PRIVATE COLLECTION, MELBOURNE

          Smith & Singer
        • BRONWYN OLIVER COMET II, 198880.0 x 90.0 x 30.0 cm
          Apr. 24, 2013

          BRONWYN OLIVER COMET II, 198880.0 x 90.0 x 30.0 cm

          Est: $50,000 - $70,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER COMET II, 198880.0 x 90.0 x 30.0 cm copper

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Shell
          Mar. 22, 2012

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Shell

          Est: $240,000 - $300,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Shell Medium: copper on bronze base Size: 150.0 cm diameter Provenance: Christine Abrahams Gallery, Melbourne|Private collection, Sydney|Menzies, Sydney, 15 December 2010, lot 39 |Private collection, Melbourne Date: 2003

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Skin
          Sep. 14, 2011

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Skin

          Est: $28,000 - $35,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Skin 1990 bronze and copper 160.0 x 17.0 x 17.0 cm

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Shell
          Dec. 15, 2010

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Shell

          Est: $200,000 - $250,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER (1959-2006) Shell 2003 copper rod on bronze base 150.0 cm diameter

          Menzies
        • BRONWYN OLIVER Calyx, 2002 copper with concrete
          Nov. 17, 2010

          BRONWYN OLIVER Calyx, 2002 copper with concrete

          Est: $220,000 - $260,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER Calyx, 2002 copper with concrete base 104.0 cm height (excluding base)

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER Idiom, 2001 copper 200.0 cm length
          Nov. 17, 2010

          BRONWYN OLIVER Idiom, 2001 copper 200.0 cm length

          Est: $120,000 - $150,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER Idiom, 2001 copper 200.0 cm length

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER Captive Object, 1987 paper,
          Sep. 01, 2010

          BRONWYN OLIVER Captive Object, 1987 paper,

          Est: $12,000 - $16,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER Captive Object, 1987 paper, fibreglass resin and cane 164.0cm height

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER Unity, 2001 copper 112.0cm diameter
          Sep. 01, 2010

          BRONWYN OLIVER Unity, 2001 copper 112.0cm diameter

          Est: $120,000 - $160,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER Unity, 2001 copper 112.0cm diameter

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER Hook, 1991 bronze and copper 60.0
          Apr. 28, 2010

          BRONWYN OLIVER Hook, 1991 bronze and copper 60.0

          Est: $20,000 - $25,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER Hook, 1991 bronze and copper 60.0 cm height

          Deutscher and Hackett
        • BRONWYN OLIVER Insignia, 2003 copper 291.0 cm
          Apr. 28, 2010

          BRONWYN OLIVER Insignia, 2003 copper 291.0 cm

          Est: $120,000 - $160,000

          BRONWYN OLIVER Insignia, 2003 copper 291.0 cm length

          Deutscher and Hackett
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