Edith Hallett Bethune Explained

Edith Hallett Bethune
Birth Place:D'Escousse, Nova Scotia, Canada
Death Place:Berwick, Nova Scotia, Canada
Nationality:Canadian
Field:Photography
Movement:Pictorialism

Edith Hallett Bethune (1890–1970) was a Canadian amateur photographer known for her pictorialist photography.

Biography

Bethune was born 3 Nov 1890 in D'Escousse, Nova Scotia.[1]

Bethune's interest in photography began with her taking casual snapshots around Berwick, Nova Scotia where her husband was working as a physician.[1] She became involved with the Annapolis Valley Pictorialists and began manually coloring her photographs. She exhibited her photographs at the Canadian Salon of Photography. Her photographs appeared in Maclean's magazine (identified as Mrs. R.O. Bethune),[2] The Camera magazine, American Photography magazine, the American Annual of Photography, and Photo-Era magazine. She won the Kodak Competition twice, in 1929 and 1931.[3]

In 1933 Bethune won the Diploma for Exceptional Photographic Art at the Century of Progress exhibition in Chicago.[4]

Bethune was disabled by a stroke in 1947.[3] She died in Berwick in 1970.[1]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bethune, Edith Hallett . Artist Database . Canadian Women Artists History Initiative . 20 March 2019.
  2. MacLeans Holiday Snapshot Album . Maclean's . 1 June 1931 . XLIV . 11 . 21 . 1 April 2019.
  3. Book: Koltun ed. . Lilly . Private Realms of Light: Amateur Photography in Canada 1839-1940 . 1984 . Fitzhenry and Whiteside . 0889027447 . 135.
  4. Book: Belton . Robert James . Sights of Resistance: Approaches to Canadian Visual Culture . 2001 . University of Calgary Press . 1552380114 . 99 .