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The American Experience in Photographs

The American Experience in Photographs

Photography expert Denise Bethel 鈥73 spoke on campus last spring about an exhibition at the Wilson Museum that included work by Ansel Adams, Dorothea Lange, Walker Evans, Lewis Hine, and others.

By Karen Adams M.A. 鈥93 English and creative writing; M.A. 鈥00, M.F.A. 鈥10 children’s literature

Lewis Hine, gelatin silver print

Lewis Hine (American, 1874-1940), 鈥淎dolescent Girls in Bibb Mill #1, Macon Georgia, 1909,鈥 gelatin silver print. Collection of Walter and Sally Rugaber.

Denise Bethel saw and auctioned thousands of photographs in her role as former chair of Photographs Americas at Sotheby鈥檚 New York, a career that she did not even know existed when she was a student at Hollins. Bethel returned to campus on April 18 to present a lecture on 鈥淭he Documentary Photograph as a Work of Art,鈥 in conjunction with an exhibit of photographs collected by Walter and Sally Rugaber. The loaned collection was exhibited February 21 through April 28 in the Eleanor D. Wilson Museum.

The Rugabers have long supported Hollins and the arts community. Walter Rugaber, former publisher and president of The Roanoke Times and Landmark Publishing Group, served on the Hollins Board of Trustees (1993鈥2007) and was the university鈥檚 interim president (2001鈥02).

Their collection of 53 photographs includes work by Ansel Adams, Walker Evans, Lewis Hine, Dorothea Lange, Danny Lyon, Sally Mann 鈥74, M.A. 鈥75, and many others. Bethel found the most moving images in the collection to be those that captured iconic moments in American history, including the Great Depression and the Civil Rights movement. 鈥淣othing tells the story of the American experience like these photographs,鈥 she said. 鈥淧hotographs do change lives.鈥

She considers herself fortunate to have gotten to know these images and others like them in her long career in the auction world and also to have witnessed, and influenced, the changing perception of documentary photography as fine art. 鈥淚 hope the high values I set while at Sotheby鈥檚 helped draw attention to the field,鈥 she said.

Denise Bethel

Photo by Michael Falco

Upon arriving at Hollins in 1969 from Richmond, Bethel planned to major in theatre. And while she did participate in theatre projects both on and behind the stage, she ended up with a double major in English and art history. Hollins鈥 famous English department and creative writing classes inspired her, but it was the art department that was a revelation, both in art history and studio.

Former Professor of Art History Tony Whitwell was her mentor in art historical practice and introduced her to the excitement of researching actual objects. And the studio art classes she took from Professor of Art Emeritus Bill White, painting and drawing in particular, were equally formative. 鈥淏ill White was a key person at Hollins for me,鈥 she said. 鈥淗is courses developed my eye.鈥

In the summer after her junior year, Bethel won one of three scholarships from the Richmond branch of the English-Speaking Union to spend six weeks studying in the British Isles. Each college and university in Virginia was allowed to submit one name for the competition. 鈥淗ad I not been at Hollins, a women鈥檚 college, I might not have been nominated,鈥 she observed, noting that the two other winners were men from coed schools.听

She chose an extramural program in 18th-century art and literature at the University of London. 鈥淭hat was life changing,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t was my first experience abroad, and it opened up my world. It鈥檚 one of those things that shape our lives, but we may not realize it at the time.鈥

After Hollins, Bethel earned a master鈥檚 degree with distinction from the Courtauld Institute of Art at the University of London. Later, after returning to the U.S. in 1975, she worked as curator for Richmond鈥檚 Edgar Allan Poe Foundation on a four-year grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. In 1980, she decided to take a leap and move to New York to try 鈥渢he trade鈥 in art. She landed her first job at the rare book auction house Swann Galleries, where she learned to evaluate, among other things, rare photographs, a category of fine art that was just taking off at the time.

She then moved to Sotheby鈥檚 as a photo specialist and auctioneer in 1990, and by then, the market for photographs was booming. In her 25 years at Sotheby鈥檚, she set dozens of records for rare photography, including the highest price for a single photograph at auction, $2.93 million in 2006, and the auction record for a collection of photographs, $21.3 million in 2014.

鈥淒enise Bethel really has been a pioneer in that field, and you can tell how much she loves the medium,鈥 said Jenine Culligan, director of the Wilson Museum, who curated the exhibit.

Brook Dickson 鈥95, interim executive assistant to the president and secretary for the Board of Trustees,听had seen and appreciated the Rugabers鈥 photographs during visits to their home, and she alerted Culligan to the collection. When the Rugabers agreed to an exhibition, they also suggested a gallery talk by Bethel, whom they had met earlier on a Hollins trip to New York.

鈥淚t was amazing to see these images go from their home into a museum setting,鈥 said Dickson. 鈥淚t made quite an impact on everyone.鈥 A range of visitors, from Hollins students and faculty to members of the community, attended Bethel鈥檚 presentation.

Bethel鈥檚 unique knowledge added significantly to the museum experience. 鈥淏esides her historical knowledge of photography, she has had so many photographs come through her own hands,鈥 Culligan said.

Culligan noted how modest the Rugabers were about their collection, and how the museum setting affected their own perception of the photographs. 鈥淎nd then having Denise Bethel come and speak changed the meaning of the collection for them and made it even more special.鈥

Having left Sotheby鈥檚 in 2015, Bethel is now a consultant to private collectors and institutions. 鈥淚鈥檝e had the privilege of working with rare photographs for almost 40 years now, and it was a pleasure to come back to Hollins to speak about the Rugabers鈥 wonderful collection,鈥 she said. 鈥淭heir photographs show just how powerful and important the medium can be.鈥

Karen Adams is a local writer.