fine art connoisseur 2018
May / June 2018

Fine Art Connoisseur
"Betsy Ashton: Portraying Immigrants' Stories"

May, 2018

"Portraits of Immigrants"
Thirteen / WNET-TV news video

Jun 2016

Ashton's portrait in a very prominent spot at the U.S. Embassy in London.

Nov 2014

Unveiling the portrait of Ambassador Lader, at the U.S. Embassy in London. Click image to see photos.

Sep 2014

Photographer Peter Krogh captured this scene in my studio in September, when a PBS video crew led by director Jon Hornbacher, seen here behind the cameraman, followed me around for two days. They were shooting a 60-second spot that will soon air on PBS stations nationwide. I have supported public television actively for many years. As a TV news reporter-turned-artist, I can speak with authority about the high quality of journalism and excellent coverage of the arts that PBS continually delivers. —Betsy Ashton

Mar 2013

Betsy was prominently featured in the March 2013 issue of Sirulian News, published by Sirulians, Inc., an organization of veteran journalists.

2012

In 2012, Betsy Ashton was commissioned to paint the official portrait of Philip Lader, former U.S. Ambassador to the Court of Saint James's, for the collection of the United States Embassy in Grosvenor Square, London.

Nov 10, 2011

Times Ledger, Queens, New York
"A Portraitist Behind the Lens"

Aug 2011

American Artist Studios
"Create a Space That You Won't Want to Leave"

Laura Garcia

Laura Garcia

DACA Recipient from Mexico
Oil on canvas 40” x 30”

Laura Garcia’s parents fled crime in Mexico City for a safe, new life in New York State where they worked in factories for two years before sending for 8-year-old Laura and her younger brother. They lacked the time and money needed to get documents. The children left the warmth of their grandparents’ tiny village to arrive without coats in the freezing fall temperatures of Newburgh. But the school welcomed newcomers with an English as a Second Language program. Laura excelled, showing talent for public speaking and leadership in school, churches, and youth groups. Voted VP of her senior class, she was denied an application to community college because she lacked a Social Security number. The DACA program allowed her to work for the YWCA and win a scholarship to college. Her father, deported after a fender-bender accident, and her mother are in Mexico caring for her brother, who developed ALS – known as Lou Gehrig’s disease. Laura’s earnings support the entire family. She’s terrified that the DACA program will end and she will be deported before she can finish her degree. Far more American than Mexican, she says, “We will all starve if that happens.”

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