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Betty Freeman
Betty Freeman
from Wikipedia

Betty Freeman (2 June 1921 – 3 January 2009)[1] was an American philanthropist and photographer. She had originally trained to be a concert pianist, practicing six to eight hours per day for twenty years, but eventually, by the mid-1960s, gave up this dream to pursue concert managing.

Key Information

Early life

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Freeman was born in Chicago, Illinois. At age 3, she moved with her parents and two brothers to Brooklyn, later moving to New Rochelle, New York and attending New Rochelle High School. Her father was a chemical engineer who had graduated from the Illinois Institute of Technology, and her mother was a mathematics teacher and graduate of the University of Wisconsin. Freeman was a graduate of Wellesley College (1942), where she majored in English literature with a minor in music.[2]

Works

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Freeman was a long-standing supporter of contemporary music, with grants and commissions to various American composers early in their careers.[2] The composers she assisted include Lou Harrison, John Cage, La Monte Young, Christopher Rouse,[3] Philip Glass, Steve Reich, John Adams, Anders Hillborg, Pierre Boulez, Harrison Birtwistle, Virgil Thomson, Helmut Lachenmann, and Kaija Saariaho. John Cage dedicated his Freeman Etudes to her (although she did not commission them), Lou Harrison dedicated his Serenade for Betty Freeman and Franco Assetto to Freeman and her husband, Steve Reich dedicated Variations for Winds, Strings, and Keyboards (1979) and Vermont Counterpoint (1982) to her, and John Adams's opera Nixon in China (1985–87) was dedicated to her. The American gamelan Si Betty, built by Harrison and William Colvig in 1979, was named for Freeman. Bequeathed by Harrison to long-time collaborator and composer Jody Diamond, it has been housed at Harvard University since 2007. She began a series of musicales at her Beverly Hills residence in 1981, which continued until just after the death of her second husband.[4]

Freeman financed a 1973 documentary film about the composer and instrument builder Harry Partch, The Dreamer That Remains.[1] She subsequently developed an interest in photography.

She wrote books about the American artists Clyfford Still and Sam Francis. She was also an art collector, and the subject of David Hockney's painting Beverly Hills Housewife.

Personal life

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Following her graduation, she married Stanley Freeman, and the couple had four children. Their marriage ended in divorce. Freeman's second marriage was to the Italian sculptor and painter Franco Assetto (1911-1991), with whom she lived half of each year in Beverly Hills and the remaining half in Turin. The marriage lasted until Assetto's death.

Freeman had four children from her first marriage, her daughters Shelley Butler and Claudia Brotman, and her sons Robert Freeman and Corey Freeman.[1]

Books

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  • 1996 - Music People & Others: 99 Photographs From the Contemporary Music World. Issued in conjunction with the exhibition "Betty Freeman: Music People & Others," held at the Royal Festival Hall in London from April 12 to June 16, 1996. Salzburg [Germany]; New York: Festival Press. (Originally published as an exhibition catalog in 1987 by Gabriele Mazzotta (Milan); text by Daniela Palazzoli; text in English and Italian.)

Films

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  • 1995 - Musical Outsiders: An American Legacy - Harry Partch, Lou Harrison, and Terry Riley. Directed by Michael Blackwood.
  • 2005 - Betty Freeman: A Life for the Unknown. Directed by Paul Fenkart. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0459079/

References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Betty Freeman (June 2, 1921 – January 3, 2009) was an American philanthropist and photographer known for her influential patronage of contemporary classical music and her distinctive black-and-white portraits of composers and musicians. She provided critical financial support to numerous composers through commissions, grants, and private salons where new works were premiered and discussed, earning her description as a Medici for the field of new music. Her efforts helped sustain and promote avant-garde and experimental music in the United States and beyond during the late 20th century. Freeman also documented the contemporary music scene through photography, capturing intimate portraits of leading figures in the field over several decades. During her lifetime, she made more than 400 grants and commissions to support artists, focusing primarily on new music initiatives. She died in 2009 at the age of 87.

Early life and education

Family background and childhood

Betty Freeman was born Betty Wishnick on June 2, 1921, in Chicago, Illinois. She was the daughter of a chemical engineer father who made a fortune in his profession and a mother who taught mathematics. Freeman was raised in Brooklyn, New York.

Musical training and early ambitions

Betty Freeman pursued her interest in music through formal study at Wellesley College, where she majored in music and English. There, she rediscovered a childhood passion for the piano and began serious training with the clear intention of becoming a concert pianist. Her studies at Wellesley enabled her to develop into a capable pianist. Although her initial goal was to pursue a life as a concert pianist, Freeman ceased playing the piano entirely in 1965, shifting her focus away from performance.

Move to California and entry into the arts

Marriage, family, and relocation

Betty Freeman married Stanley Freeman, with whom she raised four children: Shelley Butler, Claudia Brotman, Robert Freeman, and Corey Freeman. In 1950, the family relocated to California, settling in Los Angeles. Her first marriage ended in divorce. On December 25, 1979, Freeman married her second husband, the Italian artist Franco Assetto, in a ceremony at the Candlelight Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas. Assetto died in 1991. At the time of her own death in 2009, Freeman was survived by her four children—Shelley Butler of West Hills, California; Claudia Brotman of Las Vegas; Robert Freeman of Beverly Hills; and Corey Freeman of Las Vegas—as well as three grandchildren.

Collecting Abstract Expressionist art

After relocating to California in 1950, Betty Freeman became an important collector of Abstract Expressionist art during the 1950s. She developed close relationships with leading painters in the movement, including Sam Francis and Clyfford Still. Her engagement with the style was reflected in her acquisition of significant pieces by artists such as Mark Rothko and Clyfford Still, which adorned her Beverly Hills home. Freeman's prominence as a collector of contemporary art extended into the 1960s, when she served as the model for David Hockney's large-scale acrylic painting "Beverly Hills Housewife" (1966–1967). The 12-foot double canvas depicts her standing in her California home, dressed in a pink sheath on her patio, flanked by a zebra-print lounge chair and an abstract sculpture. Hockney approached Freeman after she admired his early work, leading to a lasting friendship; she acquired the painting directly in 1967, and it remained in her collection until it was sold at auction in 2009.

Patronage of contemporary music

Initial involvement and key relationships

Betty Freeman's involvement in contemporary music patronage began in 1961, when she contributed $100 to help post bail for composer La Monte Young after his arrest on marijuana charges in Connecticut. Young later sent her tapes of his music, which introduced her to his work with sustained tones and overtones, sparking her deep interest in avant-garde composition. This initial act marked her entry into supporting experimental music, following her established role as a collector of Abstract Expressionist art during the 1950s. In 1964, Freeman became a producer of a new music series at the Pasadena Art Museum (now the Norton Simon Museum), where she presented innovative concerts and encountered many emerging composers. That same year, she met Harry Partch, an eccentric composer and instrument maker who was then living in poverty and had been residing in his car. Captivated by his visionary approach and unique 43-tone scale, she provided him with a studio and house, covered his living expenses, and supported him consistently for the next decade until his death in 1974. Freeman also underwrote the 1969 UCLA production of Partch's opera Delusion of the Fury.

Commissions, grants, and lasting impact

Betty Freeman's patronage extended through generous grants and commissions that sustained contemporary composers over four decades. She made more than 400 such grants and commissions, typically in mid-sized amounts ranging from several hundred dollars to five figures, to support the creation of new works, composers' living expenses, music copying, performances, and recordings. Her support reached a wide range of composers, including John Cage, whose Freeman Etudes are dedicated to her; Philip Glass; Pierre Boulez; John Adams, whose opera Nixon in China (1985–87) is dedicated to her; Elliott Carter; La Monte Young; Harrison Birtwistle; György Ligeti; and Helmut Lachenmann. She often began assisting composers early in their careers, helping to enable major works and foster their development. From 1981 to 1991, Freeman hosted Sunday afternoon musicales and salons in her Beverly Hills home, featuring presentations by established figures such as Elliott Carter, Philip Glass, John Cage, and Pierre Boulez, as well as emerging artists. These intimate events, planned with input from critic Alan Rich and culminating in social gatherings, served as a focal point for artistic activity and community building in contemporary music. Her efforts earned recognition as having a profound effect on contemporary classical music, with composers and conductors crediting her with sustaining the field through direct support and by creating opportunities for new works to reach audiences.

Photography career

Transition and training

Betty Freeman's interest in photography emerged in the early 1970s amid her patronage of avant-garde composer Harry Partch. While producing the documentary The Dreamer That Remains: A Portrait of Harry Partch in 1972, she was pressed into service as the still photographer on set. The resulting images pleased her sufficiently that she decided to pursue photography more seriously. To develop her skills, Freeman attended workshops led by prominent photographers Ansel Adams and Cole Weston. These sessions provided formal training in photographic techniques during a period when she was transitioning from her established role as an arts patron to active creative practice.

Subjects, exhibitions, and publications

Betty Freeman produced a significant body of black-and-white portraits depicting leading figures in contemporary music and the visual arts, often capturing them in candid, intimate moments within their working or living environments. Her subjects included composers such as John Cage, Pierre Boulez, Morton Feldman, Philip Glass, Steve Reich, and Harry Partch, as well as visual artists like David Hockney, Roy Lichtenstein, and Sam Francis. These photographs emphasized revealing, unposed glimpses into the personalities and creative lives of her sitters, many of whom she knew personally through her patronage activities. Her work gained international recognition through exhibitions across the United States, Europe, and Japan. Notable shows included presentations at Carnegie Hall in New York, the Walt Disney Concert Hall in Los Angeles, the Royal Festival Hall in London, and multiple venues in Japan in 1990, among others. The touring exhibition "Music People" featured her portraits of major contemporary composers and musicians and traveled widely from the mid-1980s onward. Freeman's photographs appeared in several publications, including the catalog Music People and Others (1987) and More Music People (1989), which highlighted her intimate portrayals of music figures. These collections documented her distinctive approach to photographing creative individuals she supported and admired.

Film and documentary involvement

Production of The Dreamer That Remains

Betty Freeman produced the documentary The Dreamer That Remains: A Portrait of Harry Partch (1974), which she financed as part of her long-term patronage of the composer. Directed by Stephen Pouliot, the short film served as a portrait of Harry Partch, documenting his early adulthood experiences, his development of unique instruments and microtonal scale system, and his collaborations with the Gate 5 Music Ensemble. Filming occurred in 1972 at locations including a beach in Inverness, California, during a period when Freeman provided sustained financial support to Partch. Freeman took still photographs on set during production, an activity that sparked her serious interest in photography and prompted her later studies in printing with Ansel Adams. This project represented her primary and sole credit as a film producer. The documentary, filmed in 1972 and capturing Partch two years before his death in 1974, gained an underground following in subsequent years.

Appearances and other credits

Betty Freeman made several on-screen appearances as herself in documentaries concerning her patronage of contemporary art and music. She appeared as Self in A Bigger Splash (1973), a semi-fictionalized documentary portrait of artist David Hockney directed by Jack Hazan. She also featured as Self in Musical Outsiders: An American Legacy (1994), which examined the work of innovative American composers including Harry Partch, Lou Harrison, and Terry Riley. Following her death in 2009, archival material and interviews with Freeman were included posthumously in Hockney (2014), another documentary exploring the artist's life and circle. In addition to these appearances, Freeman received a technical credit as still photographer in the Camera and Electrical Department for the 2005 television documentary Betty Freeman: A Life for the Unknown.

Personal life and death

Marriages, salons, and later years

Betty Freeman was married twice. Her first marriage was to Stanley Freeman, with whom she had four children—Shelley Butler, Robert Freeman, Corey Freeman, and Claudia Brotman—before the couple divorced. On December 25, 1979, she married her second husband, the Italian painter and sculptor Franco Assetto, in a ceremony at the Candlelight Wedding Chapel in Las Vegas. Beginning in 1981, Freeman and Assetto hosted renowned Sunday musicales in the art-filled living room of their Beverly Hills home. These intimate salons typically featured discussions, live performances, or tape presentations by contemporary composers—often two at a time—for an invited audience of about 100 guests, including conductors, artists, and music professionals. Notable examples included a 1990 event where John Adams and Peter Sellars discussed their opera The Death of Klinghoffer. Although Assetto reportedly could not stand contemporary music, he was a crucial partner in the events, preparing Italian pasta suppers and bread for the guests after the presentations. The musicales fostered networking within the new music community and ran until shortly after Assetto's death in 1991. In her later years following Assetto's passing, Freeman continued her patronage of contemporary music and her photography pursuits, which she had developed since the 1970s through portrait work and workshops with Ansel Adams and Cole Weston.

Death and legacy

Betty Freeman died on January 3, 2009, at her home in Beverly Hills, California, from pancreatic cancer at the age of 87. She was widely recognized as one of the most influential individual patrons of contemporary classical music during the late 20th century, frequently described as a modern-day Medici for her direct, personal support of composers through commissions, grants, and hospitality rather than institutional channels. Her contributions included hundreds of grants and commissions to numerous composers, enabling new works, performances, recordings, and living expenses for figures such as John Cage, John Adams, Pierre Boulez, and Harry Partch, with notable examples including Cage's "Freeman Etudes," named in her honor. Composers and observers credited her with creating a focal point for artistic activity in Los Angeles and having a profound effect on the field through her discerning enthusiasm for challenging, dissonant new music. Her legacy also encompasses her photography career, which produced numerous portraits of composers exhibited internationally, and her significant collection of contemporary art, featuring works by Abstract Expressionists and Pop artists. Following her death, her estate consigned 20 paintings from the collection to Christie's for auction in May 2009, with estimates of $26 million to $39 million, including David Hockney's "Beverly Hills Housewife" (1966), a large-scale portrait of Freeman herself.

References

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