Collection

South Sound

CATEGORY:
YEAR:
1995
MEDIUM:
Oil on canvas
SIZE:
68 x 38 in.

This beautifully rendered oil painting showcases Sibley’s versatility to work with both watercolour and oil as she documents outdoor scenes in the Cayman Islands. The composition of the painting is dominated by the coconut tree and boat in the foreground, while the two figures leisurely walking the dog in the background directly and conceptually balance the piece. The laid-back nature of the scene symbolises the slower pace of life that has always sat shoulder to shoulder with the hardworking nature of the Islands’ people.

About the Artist
Joanne Sibley

b. 1930

Joanne Sibley arrived in the Cayman Islands from Canada in 1980 after living in Jamaica, where she had established herself as a successful artist. An interior designer by trade, Sibley has a signature style highly influenced by her formal training in architectural rendering. She has become one of the Islands’ most prolific and recognisable artists and was awarded the 1995 Creativity Prize by CNCF. Her work is featured in Art of the Cayman Islands, the Islands’ first formal art history (Scala Fine Art Publishers Ltd.: Fall 2016). NGCI exhibitions include the solo show Watermarks (2005), Faces and Figures (2007), Our Story of Art (2013), Metamorphoses (2014), All Access (2015), A Legacy of Light (2016), Mediating Self (2017), Tropical Visions (2019), Seascapes: Maritime Art from the National Collection in Little Cayman (2020) at the Little Cayman Museum, Saltwater in Their Veins (2020) and The People’s Collection: A 25-Year Cultural Legacy (2022).