A Greek Peasant on the Limassol Works 1881

Gender information of the object: 
Color: 
Author: 
Euphrosyne Rizopoulou-Egoumenidou
Primary Material: 
Source: 
Donisthorpe Donne - Private collection Costas & Rita Severis Foundation Since 1999, the Costas & Rita Severis Foundation has organised cultural and educational events while promoting research and scholarship in Cyprus. In 2013, the Foundation began implementing the Sharing History, Art, Research & Education (SHARE) initiative, a partnership programme of the Costas & Rita Severis Foundation, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), the Turkish Cypriot University Women’s Association, and the NGO Support Center. The goal of SHARE is to provide a common platform for the exploration of the island’s cultural heritage by means of visual and creative arts, through which to increase the potential for peaceful coexistence in Cyprus. In 2014, the Foundation opened the Centre of Visual Arts & Research (CVAR) on Ermou Street, in the heart of the walled city of Nicosia. CVAR hosts the Costas & Rita Severis collections, which comprise more than 1,500 works of art by artists travelling to Cyprus during the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries, hundreds of Cypriot memorabilia, dozens of Cypriot costumes from the 18th to the 20th centuries, and more than 10.000 books on the history, art and culture of Cyprus and its neighbours.
Code: 
388
Translator: 
Euphrosyne Rizopoulou-Egoumenidou
Description: 
A few years later, in 1881, an amateur painter, Colonel Benjamin Donisthorpe Alsop Donne, paint­ed two watercolours presenting ‘A Greek Peasant on the Limassol Works’ and ‘A Turkish Cypriot Worker’, respectively, as if he wanted to urge us to compare the appearance of the two. Both wear their traditional cos­tume, each part of which is accurate­ly depicted: the Greek (shown from the front) wears a black waistcoat crossed over the chest and with two oblique rows of buttons, over a white shirt, black baggy trou­sers (vráka), which meet the black top boots under the knee, a crimson broad sash at the waist and a crimson fez with a striped headscarf round it.
Bibliography: 

Severis, R. C., Travelling Artists in Cyprus 1700-1960, London: Phillip Wilson Publishers Limited. (page 159 fig 180)