Fanny Amelia Bayfield Explained

Fanny Wright Bayfield
Birth Name:Fanny Amelia Wright
Birth Place:Kensington, London, United Kingdom
Death Place:Charlottetown, Canada
Nationality:Canadian
Field:Painter, Educator

Fanny Amelia Bayfield (née Wright; 1813/14  - September 11, 1891) was an English-born Canadian artist and educator.

Career

The daughter of Charles Wright, a captain in the Royal Engineers, Bayfield was born in Kensington and reputedly studied art in England with an instructor who also taught Queen Victoria. She came to Lower Canada in 1833 when her father was posted to Quebec. In 1838, Bayfield married Captain Henry Wolsey Bayfield, a surveyor; the couple had four sons and two daughters. In 1841, she moved with her husband to Charlottetown. She taught painting and possibly music to women there.

Works attributed to Bayfield (she did not sign her work) are held in the collections of the Glenbow Foundation in Calgary and the Confederation Centre Art Gallery in Charlottetown.[1]

She died in Charlottetown at the age of 77.[2] Her granddaughter presented an album of wildflowers in watercolour, Canadian wild flowers, to Library and Archives Canada.

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Bayfield, Fanny Amelia (Wright) . Canadian Women Artists History Initiative.
  2. Wright, Fanny Amelia . 6513 . McKenzie . Ruth . 12.