Constance Greaves
Greaves was renowned for her work in a field now seen as peculiar to the colonial period. This was the ‘native study’. The genre emerged in South Africa at this time as the result of efforts by the likes of Leo François (1870–1938), President of the Natal Society of Artists (NSA), to create a school of figure painting as an antidote to the prevalence of landscape in South African painting. An incentive for this appeared when Karl Gundelfinger, a Durban patron, established the Gundelfinger Prize, worth 20 guineas, for the best painting of ‘native life’ exhibited at the NSA in Durban. Greaves, who worked in watercolour, won the prize in 1930. She was also a frequent exhibitor on the SA Society of Artists exhibitions in Cape Town. Born in Brighton, she studied at the Brighton School of Art. She lived between England and South Africa, but finally returned in 1930 to settle, at first in the Transkei, and then near Richmond in Natal. Read More…