The mosque

Creator:

Grimble, Rosemary (1917-2013)

Date:

1953

Places:

[s.l.]

Inscriptions:

Inscribed in lower left: Cyprus

Description:

Born in Gilbert and Ellice Islands in the Pacific, Rosemary Grimble was the daughter of Sir Arthur Grimble, a well known colonial administrator. She lived in Cyprus with her husband Adrian Seligman and worked for the Cyprus Review. She hardly ever uses colour in her drawings preferring linear black and white sketches, sometimes using only ink. This pen and ink drawing depicts a two dome mosque surrounded by dense vegetation. The banana tree on the left is suggestive of a location near Paphos where banana plantations are still to be found. The ruined minaret and the density of the surrounding flora suggest that the mosque is abandoned.

Dimensions:

19 x 31 cm

Signature(s):

Signed in lower left: R. Grimble

Identifier:

PNT-00277

Classification:

Drawings

Object Type:

Drawing

Rights Holder:

© Costas and Rita Severis Foundation

Rights Statement:

The Costas and Rita Severis Foundation holds or manages the copyright(s) of this item and its digital reproduction. If you need information about using this item, please send an email to [email protected]

Give us Feedback

We're always looking to improve our records, so if you have any information about an object or recognize any of the people, locations, monuments in the photographs, please give us details in the form provided here.

Give us Feedback

We're always looking to improve our records, so if you have any information about an object or recognize any of the people, locations, monuments in the photographs, please give us details in the form provided here.