Artwork by William Roy Brownridge,  Kick Save

Bill Brownridge
Kick Save

acrylic on canvas
signed lower left; titled on the reverse
15.75 x 19.75 ins ( 40 x 50.2 cms )

Auction Estimate: $900.00$700.00 - $900.00

Price Realized $1,888.00
Sale date: December 12th 2019

Provenance:
Mayberry Fine Art, Toronto
Provate Collection, Toronto

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William Roy Brownridge
(1932)

William Roy Brownridge was born in 1932 in the heart of the Western Canadian prairies in Rosetown, Saskatchewan. Born with Spina Bifida, the young Bill was fascinated with sports, but unable to participate. A lifelong interest in art grew out of his disability. Forced to remain seated for long periods, Bill started to draw, and then to paint. He began to see the possibility of art as a way to escape his immobility - to gain some degree of independence.

Bill Brownridge graduated from the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology and Art (now the Alberta College of Art) with a diploma in advertising art. In 1975-76 he won a Canada Council grant to paint and draw the disappearing railroad architecture of the prairies. He was commissioned in 1981 by the Calgary Olympic Development Association to render a series of serigraphs depicting the sporting events of the Olympic Winter Games. These works were used as a part of Calgary's winning presentation (both in print and film) to the International Olympic Committee for the 1988 Olympics.

In his words, “I am likely more attune to the effects of light and colour because as a child I had so much time to observe….why my work is often filled with action. I have studied movement all my life.” His childhood experience found expression in 1995, when he wrote the children’s book, The Moccasin Goalie, which became a National best-seller

In order to dedicate himself exclusively to painting he left advertising for good in1995. Since then he has also become a writer and illustrator of his own series of best-selling children's books. Brownridge has exhibited across the country, and his works are represented in corporate and private collections (including many NHL players and coaches) nationwide.