Madge Freeman was born in Bendigo in 1895 and moved to Melbourne to study at the National Gallery School. She subsequently enrolled at the George Bell School where she became interested in Modernism. In 1924 Freeman travelled to Europe and settled in Paris, where she married an Australian engineer. His work in the mining industry took the couple to Ghana in West Africa, where Freeman would paint street scenes and landscapes. Executed in quick brushstrokes, this watercolour captures the light and mood of a hot afternoon in the Ghanaian town of Obuasi. The quality of Freeman’s watercolours was praised by William Blamire Young and Arthur Streeton in 1934 when they were exhibited in Melbourne.