Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Drexel Institute
Known for
Illustrations
Movement
The Golden Age of Illustration
Ethel Franklin Betts Bains (September 6, 1877 – October 9, 1959) was an American illustrator primarily of children's books during the Golden Age of American Illustration in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.
Life
Early life and education
Ethel Franklin Betts was born on September 6, 1877, in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, the youngest daughter of doctor Thomas Betts and housekeeper Alice Whelan. Illustrator Anna Whelan Betts was her older sister.[1][2]
Betts attended the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts before enrolling in illustrator and teacher Howard Pyle's class at Drexel Institute in 1899. Betts, accompanied by her sister Anna and mutual friend Dorothy Warren, established a studio near Pyle's after he moved to Wilmington, Delaware. Her stay in Wilmington spanned two winters, the latter of which she spent as a guest in Pyle's home.[3]
Marriage
After leaving Wilmington, Betts worked in a studio in her parents' barn until she married Edward Bains (August 2, 1874 – July 10, 1949), the executive of the hosiery manufacturing company Barger, Bains & Munn, on September 20, 1909.[4][5][6] On July 11, 1910, she gave birth to her daughter Sarah Mellor Bains, who died at six months old from acute otitis media, a pneumonia infection of the middle ear.[7]
Career
In the 1900s, Betts gained prominence alongside other women illustrators such as Sarah Stilwell Weber and Jessie Willcox Smith. According to Betts herself, she and her colleagues "entered the field at the time color illustration was reaching its height and came into full flower". Even with greater recognition, the works of women illustrators were still subject to both positive and negative gendered criticism.[9]
Betts was a member of both the Philadelphia Water Color Club (WCC)[11] and the Fellowship of the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts,[12] where she continued to exhibit through the 1920s.[3] Betts received the Carol H. Beck Medal in 1922 for presenting the best portrait.[13][14]
^L. M. (January 1923). "Water Colors and Miniatures at the Pennsylvania Academy". The American Magazine of Art. Vol. 14, no. 1. New York, New York: American Federation of Arts. p. 33. JSTOR23928046.