Southern African Collections : Barbara Tyrrell watercolours
Southern African Collections
<p style='text-align: justify;'>Sixty original watercolours (280 x 380 mm) and three prints of watercolours. <b>Original titles and captions have been recorded as found and may contain offensive, inappropriate or outdated terms. They have been retained to reflect the context of the collection's creation.</b>A note on placenames: The original titles and captions include historical place names that have since changed. Where applicable, modern/current names have been provided in [brackets] directly following the original name. </p><p style='text-align: justify;'>Further contextual information is contained in Barbara Tyrrell's published work, 'Tribal peoples of Southern Africa' (1968).</p><p style='text-align: justify;'>Barbara Eleanor Harcourt Tyrrell was born in 1912 in Durban and grew up in Zululand. Her father was an assistant magistrate and later interpreter in the Department of Native Affairs. Tyrrell trained as an artist at the University of Natal during the 1930's and worked for a time in London on fashion drawing. She returned to South Africa and settled in Richmond. Her interest in the rich and diverse dress and adornments worn by the peoples of southern Africa inspired her to document them at a time of increasing modernisation and westernisation. Tyrrell embarked upon her first field trip in 1934, and by the 1960s, had recorded the costume and customs of virtually all of southern Africa's peoples.</p>