Bryony Dalefield
{{Short description|New Zealand photographer and visual artist}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2019}}
Bryony Dalefield (born 1951) is a New Zealand photographer and visual artist based in Wales. Her photographs are held in the collections of the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki and the Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa.
Early life
Dalefield was born in 1951 in Palmerston North, New Zealand, and grew up on a farm in the Manawatū region.{{Cite journal|last=Shopland|first=Alice|date=July 1995|title=Essential viewing|journal=NZ House & Garden|pages=82}} In 1976, she travelled to the United Kingdom to work.{{Cite news|title=Quilts reflect on life's journey|last=Morris|first=Deborah|date=1994-12-10|work=Evening Post (Wellington)}} During the 1990s she lived and worked in the village of Wye on the English-Welsh border.{{Cite news|title=Power of cloth cutters|last=Mack|first=James|date=1994-12-17|work=Evening Post (Wellington)}}
Education
Dalefield studied photography at the Elam School of Fine Arts in Auckland.{{Cite news|title=Design inspiration materialised|last=Curnow|first=Sue|date=1995-08-23|work=New Zealand Herald}}
Career
After graduating from Elam, Dalefield worked as a photographer in New Zealand. Her photographs were featured in New Art: Some Recent New Zealand Sculpture and Post-Object Art, edited by Jim Allen and Wystan Curnow in 1976.{{Cite journal|last=Green|first=Anthony|date=April 1977|title=Book review|url=https://www.art-newzealand.com/Issues1to40/books0501.htm|journal=Art New Zealand|volume=5}}
She began making quilts around 1979 after seeing an exhibition in the UK in which quilting was presented as an artistic medium. Her quilts have included motifs such as eyes, hands, scissors and trees, along with Māori-inspired designs. Regarding works presented in her solo exhibition Provided with Eyes, she said that her quilting
has taken me to various countries and through stages in my life. I think they reflect that, to me they a story about a journey. [...] What I like is the size. Quilting is done on a larger scale and designed to be wrapped around the body. All my work is larger than me.Dalefield works mainly with tartans (a nod to her Scottish ancestry), chintz, calico and glazed cotton, fabrics that are all prone to fading.{{Cite news|title=Time of the quilts|last=Rose|first=Jeremy|date=1994-12-15|work=City Voice (Wellington)}} She describes herself as a quilter "greedy for pattern".
Notable exhibitions:
- No Man's Land: Extending the Boundaries of Women and Art in Aotearoa at Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt, 1993. This exhibition, curated by Laurence Hall, celebrated the centennial of Women's suffrage in New Zealand, and featured work from 47 artists known for their innovations in craft and materials. Dalefield presented a work titled Do we stand on their shoulders or do they ride on ours? {{Cite journal|last=Rosier|first=Pat|date=Spring 1993|title=Strokes and Art Attacks: No Man's Land|url=https://broadsheet.auckland.ac.nz/docs/1993/Broadsheet-1993-199.pdf|journal=Broadsheet|pages=60}}
- Provided with Eyes at Dowse Art Museum, Lower Hutt, 1994.{{Cite journal|last=Williamson|first=Lyn|date=October 1994|title=Art in Store: The Dowse Art Museum|journal=Pacific Way|pages=42–43}} For this exhibition, Dalefield brought to New Zealand a collection of 33 quilts from an exhibition that had first shown at the Glynn Vivian Art Gallery in Swansea, Wales. The exhibition was then shown at other galleries around New Zealand (including Auckland Museum) before heading back to the UK for a national tour. Dalefield wrote a text to accompany the exhibition, also titled Provided with Eyes.
- Contact at Michael Lett Gallery, 2013. This exhibition presented fifty black and white photographs by Dalefield, documenting the 1974 performance of Jim Allen's work Contact at the Auckland Art Gallery Toi o Tāmaki.{{Cite web|url=http://michaellett.com/exhibition/jim-allen-contact/|title=Jim Allen Contact|website=Michael Lett|language=en|access-date=2019-04-28}}
- Cusp at Ruthin Craft Centre, Denbighshire, 2017. This group exhibition presented works from seven Welsh artists whose works mingle art and craft. Other artists included Claire Curneen, Paul Emmanuel, Nigel Hurlstone, Christine Mills, Beth Elen Roberts and Sean Vicary.{{Cite web|url=http://ruthincraftcentre.org.uk/exhibitions/cusp/|title=Cusp|website=Ruthin Craft Centre|language=en|access-date=2019-04-28}}
Written works:
References
{{Reflist}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Dalefield, Bryony}}
Category:New Zealand women artists