|
Rosa
Fiveash 1854 - 1938 botanical artist
Rosa
Catherine Fiveash (1854-1938), botanical artist, was born on 22
July 1854 in Adelaide, youngest child of Margaret (born Rees) and
Robert Archibald Fiveash, businessman and mine superintendent. Educated
by a governess, trained in art by Miss A. Benham and from 1881-88
at the Adelaide Schools of Art and of Design, Rosa 'the little one
in black' was selected from the school's pupils to illustrate J.
Ednie Brown's Forest Flora of South Australia (1882-90).
Rosa painted 32 of the 45 plates. She gained an art class teachers'
certificate from Adelaide and from South Kensington, London, and
gave lessons at Tormore House School and privately.
Her early involvement with the field naturalists' section of the
South Australian branch of the Royal Society (founded 1883), for
whom she did 'some work', may have influenced her choice as an artist.
The illustration of native plants was not part of her art training.
In a 30-year collaboration with her 'dear doctor' (Dr R. S. Rogers,
a world authority on Australasian orchids) Rosa illustrated his
Introduction to the Study of South Australian Orchids (1911)
and early editions of the orchidaceae section of Black's Flora
of South Australia. She reproduced 'her elusive spidery subjects'
with absolute accuracy. A fellow and council member of the (Royal)
South Australian Society of Arts, 1892-1913, Rosa exhibited at the
society's exhibitions and in Victoria and London. In 1900-02 she
travelled abroad with her sister Mary Emily.
In 1908 Rosa painted 322 meticulous watercolours of the South Australian
Museum's Reuther collection of toas, small enigmatic Aboriginal
sculptures from the Lake Eyre region. She illustrated scientific
papers, including coloured plates for E. C. Stirling's treatise
on the blind marsupial mole (1891). She included Aboriginal artefacts
in the motifs of an illustrated address to Stirling. She reputedly
introduced china painting into South Australia, doing her own firing
'in an assayer's muffle furnace'.
Lord Tennyson, the Governor, secured for the Adelaide Art Gallery
48 of her watercolours, which had been prepared for a London publication,
'at very considerable expense' - 200 pounds - which later were transferred
to Adelaide Botanic Gardens. Her original floral portraits and plates
of the Rogers' collection are held by the Adelaide Botanic Gardens.
In 1937 she presented 130 of her Australian flower paintings to
the Adelaide Public Library - four bound volumes of strong vibrant
watercolours on tinted paper.
Lady Tennyson, writing in 1900 about a visit by Rosa and her sister
with 'the most lovely collection of the Australian flowers which
she had done' described the sisters as 'more or less ladies - well
read and kind little old maids'. Rosa never married. She lived comfortably
in the lovely Fiveash family home, 'Gable House', in North Adelaide,
enjoying the friendship and acclaim of distinguished writers and
scientists. She was a devout Anglican. Failing eyesight prevented
her from painting in 1934 and she died on 13 February 1938, leaving
an estate of 8000 pounds. Known the world over among flower lovers
she was the 'undoubtedly foremost botanical artist in Australia'
though the first published volume to appear under her own name was
Rosa Fiveash's Australian Orchids in 1974.
Joyce Gibberd
Eric B Sims The South Australian Naturalist vol 49, 1975;
vol 55 1980.
|