Early life and military service
Braund was born in Devon and educated atTeaching
He taught at Bideford Grammar School before World War II and demobilised to Hornsey College of Art ( to teach design and printmaking until 1976.Artistic career
Over this period he developed a style of cubist space in his lithographs. they were quick to find critical acclaim. Some of these lithographs were chosen to represent Great Britain at the 1954 Venice Biennale. There he joined his contemporaries; Lucian Freud, Henry Moore, Francis Bacon, Ben Nicholson, Henry Cliffe and Eduardo Paolozzi. He became a major force in British art from the early 1950s and gained a following overseas. Exhibitions with his contemporaries quickly followed in London galleries, such as the famous Redfern Gallery in Cork Street, St Georges Gallery, and the Zwemmer Gallery. He also exhibited at the Royal Academy and the Arts Council of Great Britain. His works are held in the collections of the British Government, the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Boston Art Museum, the cumin Museum in Southwark and the British Council. His relief sculptures adorn London's Thames River Police Boatyard in Wapping and Paddigton Police Station (now West End Gate). He was featured in documentaries including The BBC's 'The Artist at Work' and the press, including The Spectator and The Arts Review; editions 1960 and 1963. Allen Jones described his teacher’s work as ‘Braque out of doors'. Braund himself, defined his point of view as ” dissect and assemble”. Since 1976 until his death in 2004 Braund retreated back to rural North Devon and the famous, warehouse-like 'Barn'. 'The Barn' was huge and attached to his house, which it dwarfed. This was a big, open (aside from the self-constructed, lean-to dark room) multi-media space again, ahead of its time. It housed all the tools and equipment needed to enable his mind over all mediums, some experimental.Style
His paint works composed of receding planes parallel to the picture plane in a post-cubist idiom. They encapsulated a less formalised response to the West Country landscape and tended to focus on fixing a moment of the changing sky. Nature for Braund does not rest, it swirls and fights, but his later work seemed to return to the more romantic simplicity of his early work. The colour is subdued and the forms, whilst inventive are direct and bold. theReferences
* * {{DEFAULTSORT:Braund, Allin 1915 births 2004 deaths 20th-century English painters English male painters 21st-century English painters 20th-century English male artists 21st-century English male artists