Ralph Lavers

Ralph Lavers (7 September 1907 – 8 March 1969) was a British painter, machinist, architect and sculpture artist. He was born in 1907 in Broken Hill, NSW, Australia to Henry and Lillian Lavers. Little is known of his early life but by the early 1930s he was participating in archaeological excavations in Egypt. In 1932-33 season he was at Amarna where John Pendlebury was director. Others in the excavation party that year included Pendlebury's wife Hilda, New Zealand poet Charles Brasch, RAF engineer Stephen Sherman. Brasch described Lavers as coming to the dig 'primarily as John's drinking companion - as friends, a rather improbable pair':

''Ralph was short, stocky, plumpish, with a soft boyish face, and usually looked rather scruffy, partly from the way he wore his clothes, often from a hangover... He was untidy; his socks hung down; he would push his hat to the back of his head, and often scratched his head in reflective puzzlement; one liked him instinctively; he invited friendliness and good-natured tolerance.''

His work was part of the painting event in the art competition at the 1948 Summer Olympics.