
SOLD
The cliff face burns bright amber, and the mist rolls in like a river, a beauty to behold, especially at dusk.
GOVETTS LEAP was named after William Govett, the first European to set foot in the area. He was a painter and surveyor and came across the spectacular spot in 1831.
The Bridal Veil Falls can be seen from the Govetts Leap lookout if you position yourself in a south-westerly direction. It was originally known simply as Govetts Leap, because the word “leap” translates as waterfall in an old Scottish dialect.
Oil on stretched canvas / 92cm x 122cm / un-framed
This painting can be purchased via MICHAEL REID GALLERIES
Contact Amber at southernhighlands@michaelreid.com.au
"Bridie's paintings invoke the beauty and intrigue of the landscape. She captures the snow, catches the light and conveys the mood of the sea".
Bridie's original paintings are also available as giclee prints, the highest standard in true-to-life art prints.
Hustle your imagination ⚡️ Get Beobe on your wall!
Well worth the wait, I’m over the moon!! Your art and vision will bring much joy to many!!! Thank you Bridie!
I'm happy. I cannot find the words to tell how much I'm happy. Be sure I'll take care of it.
"Where dreams are made.... she's a stunner!"
"Thank you, thank you, it came perfect, love it"
Bridie O'Brien
Artist
Bridie O'Brien. Beobe. Short for B.O.B.
I was born in Young, NSW. Sheep and wheat country. Dust storms. Eldest of six in a split and patched family. An upbringing brimming with hard lessons, adventure and self-reliance.
I went to Sydney on a music scholarship and swapped paddocks for stages.
I have pulled cables through dark venues at 3 am. Called shows from the wings. Directed live television broadcasts. Managed teams across national roadshows. Travelled solo abroad extensively. Made a record on a remote Caribbean island.
I ride motorcycles and grow my own vegetables. I've played guitar at festivals here and overseas and written and released three studio albums. Music was never a hobby. It was oxygen. It carried me across continents and, in the end, led me back to the visual.
Art kept circling. Quiet. Patient. In 2020, when the stages went dark, I stopped pretending and chose painting fully.
Now I work in thick oil, cut in with a palette knife. I paint the places that have carved themselves into me. Headlands. Back roads. Snow country. Beaches that taste of salt. I am not chasing photographs. I am chasing the pulse beneath them.
Every landscape is lived and felt first. I stand in it. I feel the temperature shift. I notice the light, the shade. Then I paint it by hand. One of a kind. Pure oil. Clear vision.
Learn more about Bridie in The Beobe Story section.