Continuing Presence: The Life and Legacy of Brother Thomas
On Monday, 20 September at 5:30PM we hosted our dear friend, colleague, doctor, and Pucker Gallery artist Geoff Dunn, and Gallery Director Bernie Pucker for a conversation on the art, the wisdom, and the legacy of Brother Thomas.
Geoffrey P. Dunn , MD, FACS, is a retired general surgeon and palliative care physician. His surgical experience included trauma, burns, pediatrics, and cancer in this country and abroad where he has been a visiting professor in India, Great Britain, Canada, China, and Norway. Since 1997 his clinical work and writing have focused on the education of surgeons nationally and internationally about the principles and practice of palliative care in the setting of serious and life-limiting illness.
Painting has been an important activity in Dunn’s life ever since it was recommended it to him at age 13 by his mother when he was confined to quarters for misbehavior at school. Upon graduation from Groton School he had a one-person show of his work, earning him the school prize in fine arts. He also received the school’s prize for best historical essay in which he chronicled the development of American landscape painting during the 19th Century.
In college Dunn majored in religion and minored in fine arts, studying with the Dutch painter, Charles Stegeman. Ironically, it was Professor Stegeman who first suggested to Dunn a career in medicine: “You are a very competent painter and do fabulous work, but I believe your heart is elsewhere. I think you should be a doctor.” During this time, Dunn studied privately in Erie for several years with professional artist, Andrew Sanders. After a long hiatus, Dunn resumed painting working in acrylic during his many trips to the Georgian Bay region of Ontario. During the late 1990s Dunn recognized a new purpose to painting through the counsel of Brother Thomas, a world-renowned potter. By this time, landscape painting had become the metaphor through which his vision of surgery and therapeutics in general emerged. This subsequently was the substance of much professional writing and lecturing. Dunn conceptualized his painting as a form of meditation, often predicting future philosophical developments in his medical work as well as summarizing previous ideas. Concurrent with this evolution of thought, a stylistic transition from plein air renderings on 9”X12” panels to larger, more abstract works has taken place. Oil is his preferred medium.
Dunn has had four solo exhibits at Glass Growers Gallery in Erie, PA and two solo exhibits at the Erie Insurance Group’s gallery. Additionally, he exhibited annually at the Mercyhurst faculty exhibit, and twice at the Erie Art Museum Spring Show. Dr. Dunn is a member of the Northwest Pennsylvania Artists Association and in 2012, he was accepted as a non-resident artist member of the Salmagundi Art Club in New York City. He exhibited in a juried show there in 2014 and received an Honorable Mention. Private patrons have commissioned his work over the past several years.
Bernie and Sue Pucker have continued to expand the gallery’s collection Since Pucker Gallery’s establishment in 1967. Pucker Gallery now represents artists from New England and around the globe, including works by the Brother Thomas. The gallery has exhibited Brother Thomas' works since 1982.