Kerry Deane was a lawyer for 40-odd years until a stroke in 2015 forced retirement. In 2017 he attended the stroke art therapy course (re-stART) at Māpura Studios.
“Then in 2018, I commenced the Leading a Creative Life course with Māpura and this marked the beginning of my new life as an artist,” says Kerry.
Nature in general, and particularly the New Zealand landscape, inspires his paintings and drawings. He likes to work with a variety of media, acrylics, gauche, watercolour, chalk, charcoal and pastels. Kerry appreciates the spontaneous effects of applying the media and seeing what happens.
His work is organic. He starts with a broad idea of what he wants to depict and often goes to a different place entirely. Experimentalism informs his work.
Kerry has a distinctive style, blending realism with abstraction. The common motif in all his artworks is a mysterious planet. Whether it’s a landscape or still life, you’ll see the planet.
Kerry loves the camaraderie at Māpura and enjoys seeing what other people are doing.
“The studio encourages free expression of emotions, ideas and inspirations. Māpura has given me access to artmaking and enabled me to turn my life around.”
Kerry exhibits regularly with Māpura and sells a number of works. He was profiled in North & South magazine in 2021. His large work on canvas, ‘Drawings’, was included in the group show ‘This the house that jack built’ at Artspace Aotearoa, from July until October 2024. This was the first time one of our artists from the disabled community has been approached by and has been shown in a mainstream gallery.