Pictured: Reuben Colley's painting with 45 Church Street,
with its distinctive glass frontage, in the centre of the
picture
Private bank Brown Shipley has unveiled a painting by Birmingham
artist Reuben Colley featuring one of the newest landmarks on the
city's skyline.
Reuben was commissioned by Brown Shipley to produce a picture
featuring 45 Church Street, which is the new home of the company's
growing team in the city.
The title, 9:45 Church Street, refers both to Brown Shipley's
offices being on the 9th floor of the landmark building off Colmore
Row and to the time of day evoked in the painting.
Peter Collier, Marketing Director of Brown Shipley, said: "The
move to 45 Church Street to accommodate our growing team in
Birmingham represents an important milestone for Brown Shipley in
the Midlands and we wanted to mark it in an appropriate
fashion.
"Reuben is an artist with an international reputation and we
have long admired his work so it was welcome news when he agreed to
produce a painting for us to hang in the boardroom of the new
building. The end result is a striking, inspirational piece that
shows how 45 Church Street has become part of the Birmingham
cityscape."
Reuben's paintings are in demand from collectors around the
world and while they typically sell for between £3,000 and
£30,000, the highest price paid for one to date is nearly
£50,000. In February last year he launched his own gallery,
Reuben Colley Fine Arts, in Moseley. He has had a number of
sell-out exhibitions in London and Birmingham and his work appears
in a number of public collections, including that of Birmingham
Museum and Art Gallery.
Reuben said: "I have always felt a certain attraction to the
idea of city life, working late, followed by a busy social life. It
has been one of the aspects of urban living that has been a
recurring subject in my paintings.
"When commissioned by Brown Shipley to paint their new
Birmingham headquarters, and having seen the new building and its
surroundings, I instantly envisaged the painting as a return to my
Hopper-inspired cityscapes, which felt like being reunited with an
old friend, and it has been a very enjoyable experience to capture,
once again, the romance of city life.
"The title 9:45 turned out to be more than a reference to the
location of the offices, it was just about the perfect time when
during those late summer evenings and perhaps after a few gin and
tonics the sunset gives way to a royally blue sky as night falls,
and as the neons come into play, the urban landscape is transformed
into a theatrical stage of spotlights and shadow, the perfect time
for a painting."