Born in Sac City, Iowa, Bruce Currie was a figure and still-life painter in modernist styles. He was long-time active in New York state, where he lived in Woodstock with his artist wife, Ethel Magafan, and daughter Jennie. They plus extended family were regarded as part of the "old guard" of the Colony. Ethel's twin sister, Jenne, and Jenne's, husband, Eduardo Chavez, also lived there and both were artists. Years later, the family members living near each other and working together were described by Ray Steiner from childhood memories as being a "clan---a special group of people who shared not only a love of art, but also a love of life and nature." Their work are classic examples of Mid-Century Modernism in American art of the 20th century.