Bayard Wootten
LIGHT & AIR
Photographs of Tryon, Western North Carolina, and Beyond
Curated by Lili Corbus, PhD, and Will Barclift
Exhibition Runtime: August 24 – November 6*, 2024
* EXTENDED DATES
Featuring the largest-ever gathering of Wootten’s work, including many never-before-seen images.
41 archival pigment prints made from digitizing the original 5”x7” and 8”x10” negatives in the Mary Bayard Morgan Wootten Photographic Collection, North Carolina Photographic Archives, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill.
PROGRAMMING:
September 19, 5:30 pm: Lecture by Dr. Lili Corbus, Women Photographers in Tryon, 1900 to 1950. Learn more >>
POSTPONED – Lecture by UNC Chapel Hill Archivist Stephen Fletcher, Light and Air: The Photography of Bayard Wootten
Click Here to View the Trifold Exhibition Pamphlet (pdf). >>
Bayard Wootten (1875-1959) is celebrated as one of North Carolina’s most remarkable, versatile, and productive photographers. Her compelling images of our region’s past, as well as a few other locales, will be on display at Tryon Arts and Crafts School from August 24 to October 18.
The photographs presented consist of archival pigment prints made from digitizing the original 5”x7” and 8”x10” negatives in the Mary Bayard Morgan Wootten Photographic Collection in the North Carolina Photographic Archives at UNC, Chapel Hill. The images were chosen from among two earlier Wootten exhibits, Light and Air and The Joy is in the Going, as well as newly printed work, much of it never exhibited before. In fact, this show, curated by Lili Corbus, art historian and TACS board member, and Will Barclift, Director of TACS, with the help of UNC archivist Stephen Fletcher, will constitute the largest-ever gathering of her work to be exhibited.
Wootten’s photographic contributions are significant. Never afraid of adventure, she is considered the first woman aerial photographer, designed the first trademarked Pepsi-Cola logo, and was a member of the NC National Guard. She reached a level of professionalism few in her era achieved. She supported her two sons and family by maintaining successful studios from the early 1900s through 1954 when she retired, making “my Old North State” her field of work. Her collection includes a wide variety of subjects and genres, including portraits, postcards, street scenes, architecture, gardens, and landscapes.
Wootten first visited the western mountains when she accepted her cousin Lucy Morgan’s offer to make promotional photos of the Penland School of Craft that Morgan founded in 1929. Some of these Penland photos of the school will be featured in this exhibition.
Penland Weavers: Lucy and Mrs. Hoppis, circa 1932.
From the Bayard Morgan Wootten Photographic Collection,
North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives, The Wilson Library,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Wootten returned to the mountains often and photos from her jaunts in Appalachian communities were published in classic books including Backwoods America (1934), Cabins in the Laurel (1935), and From My Highest Hill: Carolina Mountain Folks(1941). She also visited Tryon in the 1930s, at least twice, staying with her friends George and Sally Cathey, owners of the Blue Ridge Weavers. While here, she photographed many landscapes and people, including Tryon toymakers, basket weavers, farmers, country roads, waterfalls, mountain vistas, and more. Most of the images in this show will be of our local region. Some places and faces may be hard to identify from our current perspective, some 90 years later, so it will be interesting to learn if any viewers recognize these scenes from our past.
Article by Lili Corbus, PhD
Toymaker [Pauline Miller Cowan], Tryon, NC, 1930s.
From the Bayard Morgan Wootten Photographic Collection,
North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives, The Wilson Library,
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.