Resumé

Bhat Boy | Biography by Bhat Boy



I think of myself as a painter and author, in that order. I was born at my grandparent's house in London, England, in 1965 and immigrated to Canada on a steam ship in 1966. It was a rough crossing, and my mother later told me that the stewards fought to look after me as all I did was sleep to the rocking of the ship. My father met us in Montreal and I settled down with my parents in the Nation’s Capital, one a cleaning lady the other a spy.

After a colorful gap year in Europe, I returned to Canada to attend the Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto disguised as mild-mannered Ian Van Lock and studied Fine Arts. The program included a year in Florence, Italy, where I was introduced to the magic of the Renaissance.

After graduating, I worked for Barclays Bank and in 1992 I narrowly escaped death in a terrorist attack on my workplace when a bomb was detonated in my building. This life-changing event made me decide to pursue my art career full time. The now famous Gherkin is where my former workplace was destroyed, a monument to my decision. It is today one of the City of London's most iconic modern buildings.

Throughout the 1990s I traveled with rolled up paintings, selling work in the United States, Britain, Switzerland and the Netherlands. During this time, I had exhibitions in Florence, San Francisco, London, New York, Miami and Fort Lauderdale. By the year 2000, my work could be found on every continent but Antarctica.

Since settling in Ottawa, Canada, I have completed numerous public commissions and established Art in the Park, now the New Art Festival. This annual art festival has grown to become Eastern Ontario's largest and recently celebrated its 25th anniversary.

I am driven to create paintings, drawings and books. My work stays forever young. I want others to be able to see what I can see; that is my gift to the world.

I live with my husband and four cats in Ottawa, Canada. My hobbies include traveling by ship, mapmaking, and drinking tea. I am never bored.

*2022 The New Art Festival, Central Park, Glebe/Ottawa

2021 published Ships and Secrets, the first book in his Known World Trilogy

1992 – present: Self-employed painter. Bhat Boy creates paintings on commission and holds a solo exhibition once a year. Recent show: February 11 to March 6, 2022 Orange Gallery, Ottawa, Canada

1997 – present: Painting Instructor

*1993 – 2013: Art in the Park, Glebe/Ottawa

*Bhat Boy is the founder of the largest outdoor fine arts festival between Montreal and Toronto now named The New Art Festival. It is a not-for-profit corporation and annual exhibition established as a platform for emerging artists to exhibit. The event has grown from 25 to 300 juried artists. Bhat Boy held varying positions on the board including chief registrar, treasurer and president between 1993 and 2013.


Commissions

Commissions make up a large proportion of Bhat Boy's output.

OC Transpo Headquarters, Commissioned by the City of Ottawa

Ottawa Public Library, Sunnyside Branch, Ottawa, Commissioned by the Friends of the Library

Scotia Bank Place, Ottawa, Commissioned by the Senators

Metro Grocery Store, the Glebe, Ottawa, Commissioned by Metro

Starbucks, the Glebe, Ottawa, Commissioned by Charlesfort Developments

The Brown Derby, Los Angeles, Commissioned by The Brown Derby

The Bronson People, Public Art, Bronson Avenue, Ottawa, Commissioned by the Glebe Community Association in conjunction with Hydro Ottawa and the City of Ottawa

McGarry Funeral Home, Ottawa, Commissioned by Hulse Playfair and McGarry

Quinn’s Pub, Ottawa, Commissioned by Quinn's Pub


Education


1987 – 1991 Ontario College of Art and Design, Toronto

Included one year of study in Florence, Italy, 1989-90

1985 – 1987 Ottawa School of Art, Ottawa

Bhat Boy is represented by Orange Art Gallery and has held a solo exhibition there every year since 2010


Instead of people in my paintings I would often paint lurking dragons, goldfish, and nuns, characters which today are trademarks of my style.

My unique style is representational but imaginative, often conveying complex ideas and scenarios.

 

It is often said that my paintings are more like how one remembers a place or object, than how it actually looks.

 

Often I will paint a busy downtown core, and in my painting it will come across as a village.

 
 

I am always being asked questions about my paintings. What does it mean? What is the story you are trying to tell?

Some of the characters that inhabit my works are deliberately designed to raise questions.

 
 

Dragons usually represent the darker side of the male psyche in my painting, while goldfish represent our relationship to the enviornment in the scenes that unfold on my canvases.