Elizabeth "Beth" Marie Van Hoesen was born in
Boise, Idaho, the daughter of Enderse Van Hoesen and Freda Van Hoesen. She earned a B.A. degree from
Stanford University in 1948. After graduation, she continued her studies in France at the
Ecole des Beaux Arts de Fontainbleau (1948), the
Académie Julian (1948 to 1950), and the
Académie de la Grande Chaumière (1948 to 1950). In 1951, she enrolled in the
California School of Fine Arts, where she studied under the painters
David Park and
Clyfford Still. Although Van Hoesen is best known for her animal portraits, her other subjects ranged from people to landscapes, still lives, and botanical subjects. She worked mainly in print media, especially etching, using drawings extensively for preparatory work. Her style is lively and playful, with attention to the telling detail. In the 1970s, she was diagnosed with depression; it severely affected her ability to draw for a time, and she began to keep a diary, which was published in 1975. During her lifetime she exhibited at museums and galleries across the United States. In the early 1980s, a traveling exhibition of her work was organized by the Art Museum Association; it toured the United States for three years. Another touring exhibition took place the year of her death. Her work won a number of awards, including a 1981 Award of Honor in Graphics from the San Francisco Arts Commission, and a 1993 Distinguished Artist Award from the California Society of Printmakers. Public collections holding her work include the New York
Museum of Modern Art, the
Art Institute of Chicago, the
Brooklyn Museum, the
Butler Institute of American Art, the
Cincinnati Art Museum, the
El Paso Museum of Art, the
Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the
Weisman Art Museum,
Honolulu Museum of Art, the
Oakland Museum of California, the
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, the
Muscatine Art Center in Muscatine, Iowa, and the
Victoria and Albert Museum in London. The artist's print archive was given to the
Portland Art Museum. A
catalogue raisonné of her work was issued in 2011. ==Personal life==