Stanley Brunst | |
Birth Name: | Stanley (Stanislau) Ernest Brunst |
Birth Date: | 1894 |
Birth Place: | Birmingham, West Midlands, England |
Death Date: | 1962-01-06 |
Death Place: | Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada |
Nationality: | Canadian |
Occupation: | Painter |
Stanley Ernest Brunst (1894 - 6 January 1962) was a Canadian painter,[1] best known for his early abstractions.
Brunst was born in Birmingham, England and came to Canada with his family at around the age of 18. In Saskatoon in 1923 where he worked in construction and then as a dry-cleaner.[2] [3] He studied at the University of Saskatchewan with Augustus Kenderdine in an evening class for four years in the 1930s but was mainly self-taught. In 1936, he began to paint abstractly. He moved to Vancouver in 1941, held three solo shows at the Vancouver Art Gallery and was a founding member of the Federation of Canadian Artists (1941) and a member of the B.C. Society of Artists.[4] He died in Vancouver. The Mendel Art Gallery organized his retrospective in 1982, titled Stanley E. Brunst, Radical Painter: An Exhibition.