10 YEARS IN THE MAKING, THE LIGHTBRINGER IS A joyful CURATION OF NEVER-BEFORE SEEN IMAGES BY CANADIAN PHOTOGRAPHER AND JOURNALIST LIZ BEDDALL.eading

Leaves on the forest floor, Algonquin Park.

known for her unique perspectives and mastery of natural light, beddall's well-defined documentary craft shines through in her first public collection —  a deeply personal body of work speaking to a decade of travel through Algonquin Park, yukon and the Canadian Rockies.

"I've never seen light move the way it does in Canada."

flying over kluane national park, Yukon

The Decade That Shaped the Work


Between 2015 and 2025, Liz Beddall built an international career as a freelance writer and photographer. Known for her rare dual expertise in journalism and photography, she was sent around the world — and across Canada — by major   publications including The Toronto Star and Canadian Geographic, all while maintaining a busy and in-demand practice in her hometown of Toronto.

Alongside her commissioned work, she began to undertake her own solo journeys through Canada, developing a deep creative preoccupation with the richness of the landscape, its creatures and its unmistakable light. This curated collection, drawn from thousands of previously unseen photographs, reflects that period of exploration and marks Beddall's evolution as a documentary and nature photographer.




lake annette, jasper
liz reporting on the dark sky festival for the toronto star

Each print from the Lightbringer Collection is accompanied by a short narrative told by the artist.

algonquin park floor, 2021


"I took this photo on a small hike I went on the morning before shooting a wedding in Algonquin Park. I'd arrived at the remote venue in a small motorboat that dropped me back off at the same launch point again at 1AM. I bundled up in my car and waited until dawn to get back on the highway. For hours I stared at single haunted lamp in the pitch darkness of the park. It was stupid but also thrilling."

algonquin park floor, 2021


"I took this photo on a small hike I went on the morning before shooting a wedding in Algonquin Park. I'd arrived at the remote venue in a small motorboat that dropped me back off at the same launch point again at 1AM. I bundled up in my car and waited until dawn to get back on the highway. For hours I stared at single haunted lamp in the pitch darkness of the park. It was stupid but also thrilling."

bespoke portraits of remote sanctuaries

documenting Canadian getaways


Learn more

the lightbringer collection

by Liz Beddall


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