NEVILLE PILVEN
CONTEMPORARY LANDSCAPE PAINTINGS
Exhibting Level One Open Gallery
During
the warmer months Melbourne artist, Neville Pilven, spends a lot of time
painting at his cottage on the fringe of the Wimmera in Western Central
Victoria. His cottage-studio is located in a quiet rural area once mined for
gold. Pilven’s semi-realist landscape paintings border
on the poetic, with historic folk references employed as pictorial iconography;
an old tank, a remnant of a fence, or a dam. His sombre palette and a sense of
emotional connection to the landscape, veil a deeper questioning upon the
forces that shape nature and our place as people in the landscape—a theme that
resonates with the landscape paintings of Russell Drysdale.
Born
in 1939, Pilven studied at the National Gallery Art
School and the George Bell School (drawing). In the mid-1960s, Pilven
left Australia for several years of European travel, study and painting, to
England, Spain and Hydra Island, Greece. In 1972, he studied printmaking at
Morley College, London, before returning to Australia in 1973, to settle in
Melbourne. He was a finalist in the John
McCaughey Invitation Art Prize, 1979, National Gallery of Victoria. Neville has
held twenty solo exhibitions, many with leading Melbourne galleries. He
has undertaken commissions for Myer, Telstra Australia and National Panasonic.
His work is in collections including Artbank, Latrobe University, Ansett,
Westpac, National Bank, Telstra Australia, Ridley, Potter Warburg and private
collections in UK, USA, Australia and Japan.