Betty Hahn

Last updated
Betty Hahn
Born (1940-10-11) October 11, 1940 (age 83)
Chicago, Illinois
NationalityAmerican
EducationHenry Holmes Smith, Nathan Lyons
Alma materIndiana University Bloomington
Known forPhotography, mixed media

Betty Hahn (born 1940) is an American photographer known for working in alternative and early photographic processes. [1] She completed both her BFA (1963) and MFA (1966) at Indiana University Bloomington. Initially, Hahn worked in other two-dimensional art mediums before focusing on photography in graduate school. [2] She is well-recognized due to her experimentation with experimental photographic methods which incorporate different forms of media. [3] By transcending traditional concepts of photography, Hahn challenges the viewer not only to assess the content of the image, but also to contemplate the photographic object itself.

Contents

Biography

Betty Hahn was born on October 11, 1940, in Chicago, Illinois where she also grew up. [1] At the age of ten, Hahn was given her first camera by an aunt. Hahn later on went to graduate from Scecina Memorial Catholic High School. Soon after, she enrolled at Indiana University with a full scholarship where she furthered her studies in Fine Arts, receiving both her BFA (1963) and her MFA (1966). [2] [4] Throughout her undergraduate years, she concentrated in drawing and painting; however, as she entered graduate study, she worked in photography. During this important developmental period, Hahn studied under one of the most well-known photography teachers of the time, Henry Holmes Smith, who encouraged Hahn's work in alternative processes. [4] [5]

Once she graduated, Hahn moved to Rochester where she taught at the Rochester Institute of Technology until 1975. Hahn then relocated to Albuquerque where she was professor at University of New Mexico until her retirement in 1997. [2]

Work

Hahn is best known for her explorations of alternative processes in photography, using both older methods of darkroom developing such as gum-bichromate and cyanotypes, with other art mediums, including hand-painting and even embroidery. She is noted as one of the first photographers to successfully integrate such a variety of art mediums. [4] [1] [6]

Hahn encourages the viewer to think more deeply through not only the use of different physical processes in her artwork, but also through the multiplicity of meanings in her photographs. In most of her work, Hahn integrates humor and irony as she explores the meanings generated by formal combinations. Some of her prints include the sprocket holes of the 35mm negative, which allude to its 35mm film origins: but by hand coloring with bright paints, she draws attention to the mixture of craft with industrial mediums. [6]

Once she started experimenting with the gum-bichromate process, Hahn started stitching into her photographs. Printing onto canvas and other fabrics allowed her to use thread to highlight certain aspects of the photograph. In combining her photographs with conventional practices, Hahn successfully intertwines formal and conceptual aspects. Not only does she speak to the mundane tasks of everyday life, but also about routine and normativity. In highlighting the ordinary in her work, Hahn elevates and revives that which has been lost in the practice of daily life. Embroidery references femininity, as Hahn underlines the feminist issue of the anonymity of women's handicraft. Her embroidery often emphasized flowers with its three-dimensionality, furthering the idea of femininity; she later on pursued this as a symbol and incorporated it in several of her other series. [6]

Art and Feminism

In her work, Hahn delivers a powerful message in regards to women and embroidery. It is quite evident through time that women's labor is needlework, and that their labor is frequently undervalued as craft both when dissimilar and alike to men's work. [7] In a time period where men overshadowed women in the traditional art, such as painting and sculpture, women oftentimes reverted to other mediums like textiles. [8]

It has been suggested that women's work, especially in embroidery, is of little value in the art field since it is considered a craft. [9] Since "arts and crafts" are more often than not paired together, it is obvious they are in the same category; however, there is a clear distinction. For 300 years, women have been taught needlework through practice and tradition, and in inadvertently, promoted obedience and household effeminate behavior. As a result, instead of regarding stitching as an art, many viewed it as a thoughtless skill, lacking originality. [7] On the contrary, however, it is far more than evident that the hand of woman is more than a mindless and conforming thing, it is one of sensitivity, thought, patience, perseverance, and strength. By incorporating embroidery and stitching, Betty Hahn pushes the audience to acknowledge the work of women not as craft or tradition, but as meticulous, creative and unique.

Exhibitions

The Division of Photographic History at the Smithsonian Institution exhibited Hahn's work in a group exhibit in the 1960s as a part of a developing series of displaying the works of women photographers. Afterwards her work was featured in multiple thematic exhibitions at the Smithsonian. [3]

Hahn's first solo show exhibiting her work was in 1973 at the Witkin Gallery in New York City. Thereafter, she received several grants from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1974, 1978, and 1983 to continue her work in explorative photography. [10]

Hahn's art has been exhibited throughout the country and worldwide featured in museums highlighting historical processes in Baltimore, Maryland (1972) and nature photography exhibitions in Osaka, Japan (1990). Her work has been displayed at the Albuquerque Museum of Art and Art History (2017), Phoenix Art Museum (2015), and the George Eastman House (2012, 2016). Hahn's work is held in private collectors, galleries, and in permanent museum collections, including the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Center for Creative Photography and the Museum of Modern Art. [11]

Exhibitions

Awards

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Garry Winogrand</span> American street photographer

Garry Winogrand was an American street photographer, known for his portrayal of U.S. life and its social issues, in the mid-20th century. Photography curator, historian, and critic John Szarkowski called Winogrand the central photographer of his generation.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Laura Gilpin</span> American fine art photographer

Laura Gilpin was an American photographer.

Marion M. Bass, known as Pinky Bass or Pinky/MM Bass, is an American photographer, known for her work in pinhole photography.

Linda Connor is an American photographer living in San Francisco, California. She is known for her landscape photography.

Don Donaghy was a member of the New York school of photography.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">David Vestal</span> American photographer

David Vestal was an American photographer of the New York school, a critic, and teacher.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Devens</span> American photographer (1857–1920)

Mary Devens was an American photographer who was considered one of the ten most prominent pictorial photographers of the early 20th century. She was listed as a founding member of Alfred Stieglitz’s famed Photo-Secession.

Nathan Lyons was an American photographer, curator, and educator. He exhibited his photographs from 1956 onwards, produced books of his own and edited those of others.

Walter Landon Chappell was an American photographer and poet, primarily known for his black and white photography of landscapes, nature, and the human body.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Todd Webb</span> American photographer

Todd Webb was an American photographer notable for documenting everyday life and architecture in cities such as New York City, Paris as well as from the American west. He traveled extensively during his long life and had important friendships with artists such as Berenice Abbott, Walker Evans, Alfred Stieglitz, Georgia O'Keeffe, Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange, and Harry Callahan.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anne Noggle</span> American aviator and photographer

Anne Noggle was an American aviator, photographer, curator and professor. After receiving her pilot's license as a teenager, she enrolled as a WASP pilot during World War II, flying missions in 1943 and 1944. Following her time as a pilot, she returned to school to study art and photography. The photographs she subsequently made, documenting how women age, received wide recognition and are held in numerous museum collections. She taught art at the University of New Mexico from 1980 to 1994, and was awarded a Guggenheim fellowship in 1992.

Barbara Crane was an American artist photographer born in Chicago, Illinois. Crane worked with a variety of materials including Polaroid, gelatin silver, and platinum prints among others. She was known for her experimental and innovative work that challenges the straight photograph by incorporating sequencing, layered negatives, and repeated frames. Naomi Rosenblum notes that Crane "pioneered the use of repetition to convey the mechanical character of much of contemporary life, even in its recreational aspects."

Alisa Wells, born Alice Wells, and also known as Alisa Andrews, Alice Wells-Witteman and Alisa Attenberger, was an American photographer who created multi-layered images and worked with found glass-plate negatives. She was most active as a photographer from 1962 to 1975, during which she was included in over thirty-five group exhibitions and six one-person exhibitions. Her work is in the permanent collection of The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, New Mexico State University, and the Eastman house.

Rebecca Salsbury James (1891–1968) was a self-taught American painter, born in London, England of American parents who were traveling with the Buffalo Bill Wild West Show. She settled in New York City, where she married photographer Paul Strand. Following her divorce from Strand, James moved to Taos, New Mexico where she fell in with a group that included Mabel Dodge Luhan, Dorothy Brett, and Frieda Lawrence. In 1937 she married William James, a businessman from Denver, Colorado who was then operating the Kit Carson Trading Company in Taos. She remained in Taos until her death in 1968.

Jessica Todd Harper is an American fine-art photographer. She was born in Albany, New York in 1975.

Jennifer B. Thoreson, formerly Jennifer B. Hudson, is a contemporary visual artist and photographer. She incorporates mechanical and natural elements in sculpture, installation, costuming, makeup, and digital editing to create hauntingly beautiful images that address faith, spirituality, and the acceptance of one's self.

Holly Roberts is an American visual artist known best for her combination of photography and paint. “Holly Roberts caused a stir in the fine art photography world of the eighties by fusing painting and photography, painting directly onto photographs”. Roberts lives and works in Corrales, New Mexico. Her work is in the permanent collection of several museums in the United States.

Cara Romero is an American photographer known for her digital photography that examines Indigenous life through a contemporary lens. She lives in both Santa Fe, NM and the Mojave Desert. She is an enrolled citizen of the Chemehuevi Indian Tribe.

Jeannette Klute was an American photographer who helped develop the Dye-transfer process at the Eastman Kodak Company and is credited with demonstrating the artistic possibilities of color photography. Klute also paved the way for women to work in the photography industry.

Joan Myers is a fine art photographer best known for her images of Antarctica and the American West. She has also photographed the Japanese Relocation Camp from the 1940s, the Spanish pilgrimage to Santiago de Compostela, India wildlife, women as they age, and the extremes of ice and fire such as glaciers and volcanoes. She currently lives in northern New Mexico.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Griffiths, Alan. "Luminous-Lint – Photographer – Betty Hahn". www.luminous-lint.com. Retrieved 2017-03-28.
  2. 1 2 3 exhibit-E.com. "Joseph Bellows Gallery – Betty Hahn – Biography". www.josephbellows.com. Retrieved 2017-03-28.
  3. 1 2 "Seasonal Rainbow Transition". National Museum of American History. Retrieved 2017-03-28.
  4. 1 2 3 "IFPDA – Artist". www.ifpda.org. Retrieved 2017-03-28.
  5. "Betty Hahn". Fraction Magazine. Retrieved 2017-03-28.
  6. 1 2 3 Yates, Steven A.; Haberstich, David; Asbury, Dana; Penhal, Michele (1995). Betty Hahn : photography or maybe not (Print). Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press. ISBN   0826316018.
  7. 1 2 Markowitz, Sally J. (1994-01-01). "The Distinction between Art and Craft". Journal of Aesthetic Education. 28 (1): 55–70. doi:10.2307/3333159. JSTOR   3333159.
  8. "Pathmakers: Women in Art, Craft, and Design, Midcentury and Today | National Museum of Women in the Arts". nmwa.org. Retrieved 2017-04-25.
  9. "Brooklyn Museum: Women's Work". www.brooklynmuseum.org. Retrieved 2017-04-25.
  10. "Betty Hahn – Bio". www.bettyhahn.com. Retrieved 2017-03-28.
  11. "Betty Hahn (American, 1940)". www.mutualart.com. Retrieved 2017-03-28.