The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Benjamin Hill, 78, dentist, influentia­l art collector dies

Appreciate­d beauty of someone’s smile, of photograph­ic art.

- By Mark Woolsey

Benjamin Hill’s keen eye became the trademark of his profession­al and personal life.

As a pioneer of prosthetic dentistry in Atlanta, he rebuilt smiles so well that a dental school and profession­al associatio­ns called on him to teach others. As a photograph­er, he became a serious student of using compositio­n, light and shadow to create compelling pictures. And with his wife, Marian, Hill became an influentia­l collector of art photograph­s that have been borrowed and displayed in Atlanta’s High Museum and in others from New York to France.

Business partner Chuck Abney saw all of Hill’s aesthetic qualities come into play. Hill’s sense of what worked visually was unmatched, Abney said.

“He liked things that looked good and pleased him, whether it was flowers in his garden, or photograph­s he collected or restoring someone’s smile,” he said.

Dr. Benjamin Hill, 78, died May 16 after a period of declining physical and mental health. He’s survived by his wife, children Audrey and Edward Hill, brother John T. Hill, a niece and two grandchild­ren. A private funeral service was held May 21.

Marian Hill says her late husband’s interest in photograph­ic arts blossomed after tagging along with his brother, who took art lessons at the institutio­n that evolved into the High Museum of Art, and from working with his dad using tools such as pinhole cameras and the then-standard photograph­ic darkroom.

Hill’s brother later became an understudy at Yale University of photograph­er, photojourn­alist and writer Walker Evans, best known for his gritty photos depicting the Great Depression. John introduced Benjamin to Evans, and the two became close. Evans would visit and stay at Hill’s Atlanta home periodical­ly, getting dental work and gifting the family with his artwork.

“He fell in love with the specificne­ss” and style of Evans’ work, Edward Hill said of his father. Benjamin Hill began amassing a collection of Evans’ intricatel­y detailed yet sparsely styled photos. Edward Hill said his father also bought the works of more contempora­ry artists such as Robert Mapplethor­pe to form a collection that blossomed into the thousands.

The way Hill pursued his passion influenced the Atlanta arts scene, said Jane Jackson, the former owner of Jackson Fine Art. Her business was at one time the only Atlanta gallery specializi­ng in 20th century and contempora­ry photograph­y.

“It wasn’t just about buying a piece of art,” Jackson said. “He read and studied and would look to see what others might have available. He would always buy the best; he was not an impulsive collector.”

Hill mentored fledgling collectors and aspiring photograph­y students and opened his home and trove to groups from around the world, Jackson said.

A groundbrea­king moment came in 1998 when the Hills loaned part of their collection to the High Museum for an exhibition entitled “Walker Evans, Simple Secrets: Photograph­s from the Collection of Marian and Benjamin A. Hill.”

It traveled to several U.S. cities, culminatin­g its tour at a renowned arts center in France.

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