Nerine Desmond

Nerine Desmond (1908-1993)[upper-alpha 3] was a South African artist known particularly for her watercolour and oil paintings, especially landscapes, seascapes, Basuto horsemen, and pastoral scenes showing cattle herders and shepherds with their animals.[1]

Nerine Desmond
Born(1908-07-18)July 18, 1908
DiedMay 8, 1993(1993-05-08) (aged 84)
Stellenbosch, Western Cape
Resting placeOnderpapegaaiberg Cemetery, Stellenbosch
NationalitySouth African
EducationCentral School of Art and Design[upper-alpha 1]
Alma materPretoria Girls High School; Star of the Sea Convent, St James, Cape Town
Known forWatercolour, oil painting
Notable work
'The Cavalcade'[upper-alpha 2]
MovementNew Group (South Africa)
Spouse(s)Dawid Botha (1945–46)
Patron(s)

Biography

Desmond was born in Constantia, Cape Town, in 1908, the daughter of Nicolaas Johannes Smith, an Afrikaner clergyman, and Ivy Desmond.[2] She studied graphics at Michaelis School of Art in 1926,[3] and London's Central School of Art in 1938, but was otherwise largely self-taught.[4] Desmond was politically conservative, and once refused the use of one of her works on the cover of a novel by Nadine Gordimer, stating in justification that Gordimer was "not a loyal South African."[5]

Career

Desmond exhibited in South Africa from 1935 until her death, initially both as a member of the South African Society of Artists and the rival New Group. She was influenced by a number of artists active at the time, including Gregoire Boonzaier and Frieda Lock, becoming well-known for paintings of farm-related and rural subjects. Initially she worked from a studio in Loop Street, Cape Town. Later she painted at her homes in Hout Bay, Wynberg, Jonkershoek, and her last home in Onderpapegaaiberg, Stellenbosch.

.[6] In 1948 she painted extensively in South West Africa (now Namibia); and in 1953 similarly in Zanzibar and Mombasa, Kenya.[4]

A South African 1961 one-cent postage stamp carried a design by Desmond and in the same year she was elected as Fellow of the International Institute of Arts and Letters. She exhibited in all three Quadrennials of South African Art between 1956 and 1964, as well as at the São Paulo Biennale (graphic), Brazil in 1961.[3]

She exhibited with the Women's International Art Club and the Royal Institute of Painters,[6] and held solo shows in Johannesburg in 1962 and Pretoria in 1970.[7] Her works are held in the following collections: Bloemfontein: Oliewenhuis Art Gallery; Cape Town: Iziko South African National Gallery; Durban Art Gallery; East London: Ann Bryant Art Gallery; Graaff-Reinet: Hester Rupert Art Museum; Johannesburg Art Gallery; Kimberley: William Humphreys Art Gallery; Pietermaritzburg: Tatham Art Gallery; Port Elizabeth: Nelson Mandela Art Museum; Pretoria Art Museum; SABC art collection. In addition, her works were acquired by HM Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother; William Ormsby-Gore, 4th Baron Harlech; and Alfred Beit.

Notes

  1. Offered a scholarship to Michaelis School of Art, but forced to decline by her mother; 'As she [ND] needed to go out and earn her living', and 'had apprenticed her to a signwriter'. It was a blow too bitter for tears'. [ABWL]
  2. A print of this large oil was produced by E. Schweickert of Pretoria circa 1960, and included in UNESCO's 'Illustrated Catalogue of Selected Prints in 1960'
  3. Her memoirs A Brush with Life [ABWL]

References

  1. "Nerine Desmond". Absolut Art Gallery website. Retrieved 27 Mar 2017.
  2. "Nerine Constantia (Smith) Desmond-Smith (1908)". Wikitree website. Retrieved 27 Mar 2017.
  3. "Nerine Desmond" (PDF). Thoughtful Journey – a celebration of female artists. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 May 2017. Retrieved 27 Mar 2017.
  4. "Nerine Constantia Desmond Fial". South African History Online. Retrieved 27 Mar 2017.
  5. Roberts 2005, p. 398.
  6. "Nerine Desmond" (PDF). Thoughtful Journey – a celebration of female artists. Archived from the original on 10 March 2019. Retrieved 27 Mar 2017.
  7. "Nerine Desmond". Art Archives - South Africa. Retrieved 27 Mar 2017.

Bibliography

  1. Roberts, Ronald Suresh (2005). No Cold Kitchen: A Biography of Nadine Gordimer. STE Publishers. ISBN 978-1919855585.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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