Michael J Browne’s Painting At Gusto Manchester Unveiled

Christie Hutchinson | 19th October 2015

Michael Browne Painting, Gusto ManchesterWhen Gusto Restaurant & Bar opened in the city centre on Deansgate in December (2014), they commissioned renowned local artist Michael J Browne, to complete a huge, intricate, Renaissance style painting of Manchester.

To say `every picture tells a story` would be an understatement for this artwork as Michael (originally from Moss Side) has included a vast array of iconic individuals and places past and present. He also decided to open up to the public an opportunity to submit ideas for a title that encapsulates the project. The winning phrase, Manchester’s own Northern lights, has been painted onto his portrayal of Central Library.

Michael Browne Painting, Gusto ManchesterThis is a description of the whole project in Michael’s own words…

“The painting is full of faces/achievements of well-known Manchester people from history. Ranging from the subject of the industrial revolution, back to back houses, to the Manchester ship canal, to Coronation Street. In the journey there are Manchester figures ranging from Emeline Pankhurst, Sheila Delaney, Kirsty Howard. ?Playwrights, novelists, scientists. There’s Alan Turing, Ernest Rutherford, Rolls/Royce, Joule, Noel Gallagher, Bee Gees. There are also sub stories in this painting. The whole image is held together with the theme of renaissance art, as a developmental journey through time. With ‘Leonardo Da Vinci’ -esque angels carrying books of knowledge, around Central Library, the hub of knowledge and also the 1st public library in the country I believe. The painting is over 5 metres across by over 1.5 metres high. It is oil on canvas. The initial idea came about via the Gusto interior design team whilst I was living in Rome. The project brief centered around ‘Central Library’ and muses holding books, showing faces of Manchester’s influential figures. Gusto’s location on Deansgate was previously the temporary accommodation of Central library.”

Gusto filmed the entire project with a time-lapse camera and generated a 45 second clip which available to view here.

The painting is enormous and staggering in its detail and captures so much of Manchester both historically and also the current changing face of the city.

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