Cherry Kearton
Cherry Kearton (1871–1940) was one of the world's earliest wildlife photographers and writers.
Kearton was born in the small Yorkshire Dales (Swaledale) village of Thwaite, North Riding of Yorkshire, England, and was . He first married Mary Burwood Coates, with whom he had a son, also named Cherry, and a daughter, Nina. He later married Ada Forrest, a South African soprano, in 1922. He died in 1940 after reading for the BBC's Children's Hour. The Royal Geographical Society's Cherry Kearton Medal and Award was created in his honour.[1]
Photography
Cherry Kearton specialised in animal photography. In the summer of 1896 he and his brother Richard Kearton (1862–1928), a naturalist,[2] reached the Outer Hebridean islands of St Kilda and many other remote places. In 1898 their famous book With Nature and a Camera, illustrated by 160 photographs, was published in London by Cassell.
Films
With the advent of moving pictures the Kearton brothers went their separate ways and Cherry moved into the field of wildlife documentary film making. He directed the following films:
- A Primitive Man's Career to Civilization (1911)
- Roosevelt in Africa (1910)
Books
- Kearton, Richard; Kearton, Cherry (1898) With nature and a camera; being the adventures and observations of a field naturalist and an animal photographer, Cassell.
Sources
- Kearton's Wildlife, part of the series Nation on Film BBC Two, 26 February 2007
- Bevis, John (2007) Direct From Nature: The Photographic Work of Richard & Cherry Kearton, Colin Sackett.
- Mitchell, W.R. (2001) Watch the Birdie, Castelberg.
References
External links
- With nature and a camera – Full text
- Cherry Kearton at the Internet Movie Database
- Kearton, Cherry, – Biodiversity Heritage Library
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