Collection

South Sound

CATEGORY:
YEAR:
1992
MEDIUM:
Watercolour on paper
SIZE:
14 x 19.5 in.

This delicate watercolour depicts dense flora in South Sound in the 1990s, before significant development encroached into this area. Andersen Berry focuses on capturing the detail of local plant life and creating a sense of lush tropical vegetation. This work featured in NGCI’s exhibitions A Legacy of Light (2016) and Tropical Visions (2019).

About the Artist
Maureen Andersen Berry

1927–2016

Born in Derby, United Kingdom, the late Maureen Andersen Berry studied fine art at the Slade School of Fine Art, London, and gained an art teacher’s diploma from the Institute of Education, London. While in the United Kingdom, Andersen Berry taught art and exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts in Burlington House, as well as the Whitechapel Gallery and the Paddington Art Society. She moved to the Cayman Islands in 1976 and taught art in Grand Cayman and Cayman Brac until her retirement in 1991, painting abundantly in oil and watercolour throughout this time. Her work is heavily influenced by Post-Impressionism and is predominantly concerned with the vibrant flora and vistas of the three Cayman Islands. She was a regular exhibitor at the NGCI festival Art@Governor’s. Key NGCI exhibitions include Our Story of Art (2014), All Access (2015), A Legacy of Light (2016), Tropical Visions (2019), and Seascapes: Maritime Art from the National Collection (2020), which travelled to the Little Cayman Museum.