Emmet
Gowin (born 1941 in Danville, Virginia) is an American
photographer. He first gained attention in the 1970s with his
intimate portraits of his wife, Edith, and her family. Later he
turned his attention to the landscapes of the American West, taking
aerial photographs of places that had been changed by humans or
nature, including the Hanford Site, Mount St. Helens, and
the Nevada Test Site. Gowin taught at Princeton
University for 25 years and has influenced an entire generation
of new photographers through his own work and his academic career.
Life and career
Gowin
was born in Danville, Virginia. His father, Emmet Sr., was
a Methodist minister and his Quaker mother played
the organ in church. When he was two his family moved to Chincoteague
Island, where he spent much of his free time in the marshes around
their home. At about age 12 his family moved back to Danville,
where Gowin first showed an interest in art by taking up drawing.
When he was 16 he saw an Ansel Adams photograph of a burnt
tree with a young bud growing from the stump. This inspired him to go
into the woods near his home and draw from nature. Later, he applied
what he learned from his early years wandering in the woods and
marshes to his photography. A student of his said "Photography,
with Emmet, became the study of everything."
After
graduating from high school he attended the Richmond
Professional Institute (now Virginia Commonwealth
University). During his first year in college he saw a catalog of
the Family of Manexhibit and was particularly inspired by the
works of Robert Frank and Henri Cartier-Bresson. About
this same time he met his future wife, Edith Morris, who had grown up
about a mile away from Gowin in Danville.[3] They married in
1964, and she quickly became both his muse and his model. Later they
had two sons, Elijah (now an emerging photographer in his own right)
and Isaac.
Some
of his earliest photographic vision was inspired by Edith’s large
and engaging family, who allowed him to record what he called "a
family freshly different from my own." He said "I
wanted to pay attention to the body and personality that had agreed
out of love to reveal itself." In 1965, Gowin attended
the Rhode Island School of Design. While earning his MFA, Gowin
studied under influential American photographers Harry
Callahan and Aaron Siskind. Three years later he was given
his first solo exhibition at the Dayton Art Institute. In 1970
his work was shown at theGeorge Eastman House and a year later
at the Museum of Modern Art. About this same time he was
introduced to the photographer Frederick Sommer, who became his
lifelong mentor and friend.
Gowin
was invited by Peter Bunnell in 1973 to teach photography
at Princeton University. Over the next 25 years he both taught
new students and, by his own admission, continually learned from
those he taught. At the end of each academic year he asked his
students to contribute one photograph to a portfolio that was open to
critique by all of the students; he intentionally included one of his
own photographs as a reminder that, while a teacher, "he was
just another humble student of art."
Gowin
received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1974, which
allowed him to travel throughout Europe. He was also awarded
a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in 1979 and
a Pew Fellowship in the Arts in 1994.
In
1980 Gowin received a scholarship from the Seattle Arts
Commission which provided funding for him to travel
in Washington and the Pacific Northwest. Beginning
with a trip to Mount St. Helens soon after it erupted,
Gowin began taking aerial photographs. For the next twenty years,
Gowin captured strip mining sites, nuclear testing fields,
large-scale agricultural fields and other scars in the natural
landscape.
In
1982 the Gowins were invited by Queen Noor of Jordan, who had
studied with Gowin at Princeton, to photograph historic places in her
country. He traveled there over the next three years and took a
series of photographs of the archaeological site at Petra. The
prints he made of these images were the first time he
introduced photographic print toning in his work.
Gowin
retired from teaching at Princeton University at the end of
2009[4] and lives in Pennsylvania with his wife Edith.
Style and aesthetics
Gowin
has acknowledged that the photographs of Eugene Atget, Bill
Brandt, Walker Evans, Robert Frank, Alfred Stieglitz,
and especially Harry Callahan and Frederick
Sommer have influenced him.
Most
of his early family pictures were taken with a 4 X 5 camera on a
tripod, a situation in which he said "both the sitter and
photographer look at each other, and what they both see and feel is
part of the picture." These photos feel both posed and highly
intimate at the same time, often capturing seemingly long and direct
stares from his wife or her family members or appearing to intrude on
a personal family moment. Gowin once said that "the coincidence
of the many things that fit together to make a picture is singular.
They occur only once. The never occur for you in quite the same way
that they occur for someone else, so that in the tiny differences
between them you can reemploy a model or strategy that someone else
has used and still reproduce an original picture. Those things that
do have a distinct life of their own strike me as being things coming
to you out of life itself."
In
an essay for the catalog for an exhibition of his work at Yale
University, writer Terry Tempest Williams said "Emmet
Gowin has captured on film the state of our creation and, conversely,
the beauty of our losses. And it is full of revelations."
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