Deanna Petherbridge


Deanna Petherbridge is an artist, writer and curator. Petherbridge's practice is drawing-based, although she has also produced large-scale murals and designed for the theatre. Her publications in the area of art and architecture are concerned with contemporary as well as historical matters, and in latter years she has concentrated on writing about drawing. The Primacy of Drawing: Histories and Theories of Practice was published June 2010 and curated exhibitions include The Quick and the Dead: Artists and Anatomy, 1997, Witches and Wicked Bodies, 2013. She celebrated a retrospective exhibition of her drawings at Whitworth Art Gallery, University of Manchester accompanied by the monograph Deanna Petherbridge: Drawing and Dialogue, Circa Press, 2016.

Life and career

Petherbridge was born in Pretoria, South Africa. She attended Pretoria High School for Girls and obtained a degree in Fine Art at the University of the Witwatersrand. After a post-graduate year teaching in the department she emigrated to the UK in 1960. In 1967 she acquired a house on the island of Sikinos dividing her studio practice for many years between London and Greece and after 2003 between London and Italy with a studio in Umbria.
After early years as a painter, producing soft-sculpture and sometimes employing anti-war imagery, Petherbridge turned to monochromatic pen and ink drawing as her primary medium in the 1970s. Studies of Islamic art and architecture, vernacular building and historical fortifications made during early travels in Europe, the Maghreb and Middle East were the basis of early exhibitions of geometric drawings; later Hindu temple architecture, ruins and vernacular structures became an important source for drawings. Her work continues to employ architectonic metaphors and in recent years she has become increasingly interested in reflections on place and landscape.. Symbolic representations of war were the subject of the 1980s around the time of the Falkland conflict. These have again become the dominant theme for large multi-panelled drawings, such as The Destruction of the City of Homs, 2016. In celebration of drawing as a portable, immediate and expeditious medium, Petherbridge has produced work in other venues than her studio while undertaking drawing residencies at Manchester City Art Gallery, UK Lalit Kala Akademi Studios Calcutta , Monash University, Melbourne, Australia, Beaconhouse National University, Lahore, Pakistan and the National Art School, Sydney.
Petherbridge's teaching career has included sessional lectureships at the Architectural Association, London, the Fine Art departments of the University of Reading and Middlesex Polytechnic. She was appointed Professor of Drawing at the Royal College of Art where she launched the Centre for Drawing Research, the first doctoral programme in drawing in the UK. She was Arnolfini Professor of Drawing at the University of the West of England, Bristol and Professor of Drawing at the University of Lincoln. She has supervised a number of PhD students and has delivered lectures, conference and symposium papers internationally. Extended lecture series in the UK include: Contemporary Drawing: Exploring the Unknown, Tate Millbank, the BBC Radio Three broadcast series The Outline Around the Shadow and Drawing towards Enquiry at the National Gallery London in association with Camberwell College of Arts. She has undertaken extensive lecture tours in other countries, some under the auspices of the British Council for example in India and South East Asia. There have also been lecture tours in Australia, Pakistan, USA, Puerto Rico.
Her public commissions include designing sets and costumes for The Royal Ballet in collaboration with choreographer Ashley Page A Broken Set of Rules and Bloodlines ; and One by Nine, choreographer Jennifer Jackson, Sadler's Wells Royal Ballet. She was commissioned by the Artistic Records Committee of the Imperial War Museum, London. She also undertook a mural on four flours for the curved foyer wall of the Symphony Hall, International Conference Centre, Birmingham.
In 1991 Petherbridge curated the trans-historical touring exhibition The Primacy of drawing: An Artist's View for National Touring, The South Bank Centre and co-selected the collaborative exhibition, Materia Medica: A New Cabinet of Medicine and Art, The Wellcome Institute, London. This was followed by The Quick and the Dead: Artists and Anatomy, National Touring for the Arts Council of England. This exhibition moved to an extended showing renamed Corps à vif. Art et anatomie, at the Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Geneva, co-curated with Claude Ritschard and Andrea Carlino. Witches and Wicked Bodies at the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, was re-curated for the Prints and Drawings Gallery at the British Museum and Artists at Work, was co-curated with Anita Viola Sganzerla, The Courtauld Drawings Gallery, London. Petherbridge has also curated a number of exhibitions of contemporary drawers including Drawing as Vital Practice, Pitzhanger Manor Gallery & House, London and Narratives of Arrival and Resolution: Abstract Works on Paper, Michael Richardson Contemporary Art, London.
Petherbridge began contributing reviews and articles to Architectural Review in 1979 and has written extensively for specialist journals and the daily press including Architects' Journal, Crafts Magazine, Building Design and the Financial Times in the 1980s, when she ran a regular column in Art Monthly commenting on commissioning, sponsorship and the social structures of visual art communities in the United Kingdom. She has written many catalogue essays and chapters in books and in recent years has published in academic journals on a wide range of contemporary and historical issues in art and architecture, with a particular focus on drawing. She was a Research Scholar at the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles. She also held a research fellowship at the Yale Center for British Art, New Haven
In 1996 she was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for services to drawing and teaching. She was awarded a Fellowship of the Royal College of Art 1997, an Honorary Fellowship of the Royal Institute of British Architects 1998 and Honorary Doctorate in Design Kingston University, London, 2001. In 2019 she was appointed an Honorary Fellow of the Warburg Institute, London.

Selected publications