


'A SOLO EXHIBITION'

“Time Travelling”
Aarwun Gallery - Canberra

7 - 30 March 2025, Opening Night: Fri 7 March 6pm-8pm


Welcome to the website of Bernard Ollis

An introduction
Bernard Ollis is one of those painters who elude easy categorization. This is at best a mixed blessing, because art historians love to be able to define an artist as an expressionist, a realist, a surrealist, or some plausible combination. Ollis is a little of each, but ultimately none of the above. He is a figurative painter, but like most established artists is willing to admit that all art is abstract.
He is a painter of people, but with none of the angst and pessimism that seem to be standard features of those artists who spend their careers studying the Human Condition. There is a lot of humour in Ollis’s work, but none of the smug, all-pervasive irony beloved of the Postmodernists. He is, in short, an awkward proposition, and his paintings revel in a kind of studied awkwardness.
Ollis is a narrative painter, but each picture is nothing more than a fragment. He will begin with a simple setting such as a bedroom, a street, or a patio, and gradually add the dramatis personae and details. A work develops its own momentum, with objects, people or animals multiplying as if by spontaneous generation. While Ollis may begin with a specific idea, by the time the painting is finished it has usually metamorphosed into something quite different.
Extract from an essay by John McDonald art critic for the Sydney Morning Herald.
Read full Profile
Bernard is the author of 'Darwin Daze' a 240 page hardcover book, available now from bookshops. There is also a 170 page version available now as an ebook on Amazon.
Description: A 26 year old graduating student from The Royal College of Art, London, goes on the journey of a lifetime to take up the position of lecturer in drawing and painting at The Darwin Community College, Northern Territory, Australia.
The year is 1976 and the young, enthusiastic, but naive young man travels from Chelsea (a suburb in London) to Casuarina (a suburb of Darwin), Nothing could prepare the young adventurer for what would lay ahead.
The memoirs are accompanied by photographs, paintings and oil pastel works, many in full colour. In addition, Bernard has produced pen and ink drawings specifically for this book.
Hardcover, ISBN: 9780646857374 Published by Martin Lane Design, Distributed by Peribo.

View sample pages at Amazon.com.au
"Ollis says he likes the idea of using the full orchestra, rather than a string quartet."
John McDonald / art critic / Sydney Morning Hearald
"I want to step beyond the conventional viewpoint because this for me is dull and obvious and I want to excite and challenge the viewer."
Bernard Ollis / The Art of / published by Robert Buratti
"Sydney painter Bernard Ollis captures the charm and beauty of Paris in his latest exhibition"
Fiona Purdon / Traveller's Tales Review / Brisbane Courier Mail Weekend Magazine
"I want to step beyond the conventional viewpoint because this for me is dull and obvious and I want to excite and challenge the viewer."
Bernard Ollis / The Art of / published by Robert Buratti
"His sense of joy and rediscovery of this vibrant muse infuses every work"
Elizabeth Fortescue / The Telegraph, Sydney
"Ollis enjoys 'throwing the viewer into the action' of his paintings. It's impossible not be caught up visually in the wild pulsating shapes on which he lavishes gorgeous candy colours and vivid patterning"
Elizabeth Fortescue / The Telegraph, Sydney
"The work is unapologetically optimistic and his aim is to transport the viewer"
Phil Brown / Queensland Courier Mail
"Bernard Ollis is an artist showing great promise in his distinctive and individual expressionist paintings and especially in his masterful oil pastels"
Tim McLachlan / National Times
"Fact is he makes a lot of the new realists look contrived in the worst sense"
Elwyn Lynn / Weekend Australian
"I love Bernards work and the first time I walked into his studio I went weak at the knees...He is a very talented man and his work is just so whimsical and full of life"
Mike Mitchell / Queensland courier Mail
"He cannot resist adding a touch of the extaordinary to an otherwise unexceptional subject."
John McDonald / art critic / Sydney Morning Hearald