Ade Bethune

Ade Bethune (January 12, 1914 – May 1, 2002) was an American Catholic liturgical artist.

Ade Bethune
Born
Adélaide de Bethune

(1914-01-12)January 12, 1914
DiedMay 1, 2002(2002-05-01) (aged 88)
NationalityBelgian
EducationCooper Union
Known for
  • Woodcuts
  • illustration
MovementCatholic social art

She was associated with the Catholic Worker Movement, and designed an early masthead of its publication, the Catholic Worker, first used in 1935. She later re-designed this in 1985, replacing one of the men with a woman.[1]

Bethune was an advocate of traditional iconography.[2]

She is buried at Portsmouth Abbey, Portsmouth, Rhode Island.

She was she was inducted into the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame in 1990.[3]

Early life

Bethune was born Adélaide de Bethune, Baroness, to a noble Belgian family. Her parents, Gaston and Marthe (Terlinden), emigrated with the family after World War I. Her mother Marthe was daughter of Viscount Terlinden.

Career beginnings

Ade volunteered her illustrations to improve the quality of the Catholic Worker when she was a nineteen-year-old art student, impressed with the work of Dorothy Day. This was preparation for her later illustration for Catholic liturgical works such as 'My Sunday Missal' in 1937, and similar works such as 'My Lenten Missal'.

Bethune also worked closely with Graham Carey and with the Catholic Art Association, founded in 1937 by Sister Esther Newport.[4][5]

Terra Sancta Guild

Beginning in the 1960s, she was the artistic director of the Terra Sancta Guild, a commercial firm that produced religious art works for many Christian denominations.

Social activism

Ade was interested in the Catholic Worker Movement's work with hospitality for the poor when she was an art student. She continued this interest throughout her life, and became interested in the issue of providing housing for the elderly, particularly the poor elderly. In 1969, she founded the Church Community Housing Corporation in Newport County, Rhode Island, to design and build housing. In 1991 she founded 'Star of the Sea' to renovate a former Carmelite convent into an intentional community and state of the art housing for the elderly, where she lived until her death in 2002.

Artistic Works

Biography

  • Judith Stoughton: Proud Donkey of Schaerbeek: Ade Bethune, Catholic Worker Artist St. Cloud, Minnesota, North Star Press of St. Cloud, 1988 ISBN 0-87839-051-0
  • On-line short biography
  • James A. Merolla Where are they now? Ade Bethune, Catholic Worker artist
  • Information from the Catholic Worker

Sources

  • The Ade Bethune Collection
  • The long loneliness : the autobiography of Dorothy Day ; illustrated by Fritz Eichenberg ; [introduction by Daniel Berrigan]. ISBN 0-06-061751-9

References

  1. Gneuhs, Geoffrey. "The Art of the Worker The Catholic Worker". LXXV (3 May 2008): 6. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  2. "Religion: Familiar Faces". TIME (5 January). 1962-01-05. Retrieved 2010-04-23.
  3. "Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame: Ade Bethune, Inducted 1990". Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame. Archived from the original on 2020-02-03. Retrieved 2020-02-03.
  4. Price, Jay M. (2013). Temples for a Modern God: Religious Architecture in Postwar America. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199925957.
  5. Harmon, Katharine E. (2013). There Were Also Many Women There: Lay Women in the Liturgical Movement in the United States, 1926-59. Liturgical Press. ISBN 9780814662717.
  6. "Church of the Angry Christ". 2 June 2006. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
  7. Helfrich & Whittaker, Kurt & William (2006). Crafting a Modern World, The Architecture and Design of Antonin and Noemi Raymond. Princeton Architectural Press. p. 56.
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