Anne Schweizer (Rose-Innes) is highly regarded as a Botanical
Artist, who has a preference for creating big, bold, life-size works
in glowing glazes of watercolour that convey a sense of drama.
Born in Cape Town, South Africa in 1930, she was 9 years old when
her family re-located from Irene to a farm in the Northern Free
State. She attended Eunice High School, Bloemfontein as a border.
In 1950 she obtained a Bachelors degree in Art History and Languages
from Rhodes University, Grahamstown. Ann returned to Cape Town in
1951 to pursue her art education at the Continental Art School and
studied Fine Art Practical Studies under Maurice van Essche. She
obtained a second degree, BA Honours in Archaeology (UCT 1961) and
later attended courses in Geography and Botany. For a year she was
employed as a scene painter at the Hofmeyer Theatre, Cape Town. The
high point of her formal working career was the years from 1956-1962
when she held the position of resident artist at the SA National
History Museum. From 1963 Ann has pursued a career as a freelance
artist producing archaeological and ethnological drawings, book
illustrations and posters, designs for silk-screen printing, and
botanical and plant paintings.
Since the Inaugural Kirstenbosch Exhibition of Botanical Art in Cape
Town in 2000, Ann has been awarded three Gold and two Silver
Medals. Her paintings have been shown at the Everard Read Gallery,
Johannesburg; the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford; the Smithsonian in
Washington DC and the Tryon Gallery in London. Presently two of her
works are on display at the Shirley Sherwood Gallery of Botanical
Art situated in the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew.
Examples of her work can be seen in the following
Shirley Sherwood publications:
A Passion For Plants; A New Flowering; and Treasures of Botanical
Art.