Emmet Gowin pairs five decades of his photographs with treasures from the Morgan's collections
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Emmet Gowin pairs five decades of his photographs with treasures from the Morgan's collections
Emmet Gowin, Edith and Elijah, Danville, Virginia, 1968. Gelatin silver print. Collection of Emmet and Edith Gowin. © Emmet and Edith Gowin, courtesy Pace/MacGill Gallery.



NEW YORK, NY.- Emmet Gowin (b. 1941), one of the most original and influential photographers of his generation, is known for constantly reinventing his working methods along with his subject matter—and also for his sensitivity to the deep historical life of images. The Morgan Library & Museum presents a unique look at Gowin’s wide-ranging work in relation to the museum’s celebrated collections in a new exhibition, Hidden Likeness: Photographer Emmet Gowin at the Morgan.

On view through September 20, the show includes 59 images by Gowin and 55 objects from the Morgan, selected by the photographer in a celebration of affinities that transcend time and space. Gowin’s work includes searching portraits of his wife, Edith, and their extended family; “working landscapes” where nature and humanity have shaped one another over centuries; aerial views of sites impacted by modern catastrophes ranging from volcanic activity to nuclear testing; and close-up portraits of nocturnal moths native to the rain forests of Central and South America. The Morgan objects span millennia—from ancient seals and tables to medieval illuminations to master drawings by artists such as Botticelli, Rembrandt, and Mondrian.

“The collections of the Morgan are vast and varied, and it is an entirely new experience to view these treasures in relation to the unforgettable work of Emmet Gowin,” said Peggy Fogelman, acting director of the Morgan Library & Museum. “As we experience the evolution of his art and ideas over time we also see the creative and often surprising linkages with Morgan objects of widely different eras and artistic disciplines. The past is present in refreshing new ways when matched with Gowin’s photography.”

Gowin, the son of an evangelical minister, studied painting before taking up the camera. In an interview with curator Joel Smith in the exhibition catalog, Gowin remarks that working with the Morgan’s collection reminded him of one of his deepest early influences: frontal portraiture “in religious scenes of the Renaissance. I thought: Why doesn’t that happen in photography? Why can’t I make representations that include a cast of characters, with the spirit of storytelling these paintings have?” Ultimately, Hidden Likeness expresses his present-day feeling of kinship with artists of past times, rather than cataloguing their influences upon him. The exhibition’s message, in his words: “If I’d seen this when I was young, I would have been very influenced by it!”

Gowin’s earliest photographs focused on his wife, Edith, and their family in Danville, Virginia. In a dual portrait made in 1968, Edith holds their gleeful firstborn son, Elijah, upside down before her while facing the camera with customary aplomb. “Kisses are among the vehicles I would use if I were not able to make pictures,” Gowin had written in a statement accompanying his graduate thesis project one year earlier. The portrait is paired with Rembrandt’s tender and keenly observed drawing of a young woman cradling a toddler in her arms. Gowin found an early hero in Rembrandt, whose swiftly rendered drawings describe the unmistakably intimate gestures and attitudes of family members in the comfort of their home.

Nearby hangs William Blake’s celebrated watercolor drawing (ca. 1805-10) for the Book of Job, featuring the monsters of land and sea, Behemoth and Leviathan. Pierpont Morgan acquired the drawing in 1909. Gowin remarks: “Blake identifies evil with energy and exuberance with life, and defines our task as the reconciliation of these apparent opposites. The energy that drives us is good; and the evil—energy—that drives us is as much a part of us as the good.” Beside the drawing hangs a photograph that appears to represent a sinister, inhuman face in profile. It is Gowin’s 1988 aerial photograph of a vast mound of copper ore tailing left behind by a nineteenth-century mine in Arizona. Like Blake’s fantastic vision, Gowin’s view hints at a destructive component that is inseparable from the human drive to create and produce.

Since the late 1990s, Gowin has been working in the rain forests of Central and South America, photographing hundreds of species of moths. To provide backdrops for his insect portraits, he travels with a binder full of details scanned from beloved drawings, manuscripts, and other documents; each image records a miniature encounter between culture and nature. He assembles his portraits into grids of twenty-five creatures native to one location. In the exhibition, a grid from Bolivia hangs near a small Belgian book of hours (ca. 1515) that is open to a painting in which Gabriel tells the Virgin Mary she will conceive the son of God. The scene is bordered by meticulously rendered flowers and insects. Like Gowin’s moths—an encoded plea for the value of wilderness—these painted species convey messages. The lilies stand for purity and chastity; the pink carnations, maternal love; and the butterflies are symbols of resurrection.

Emmet Gowin (b. 1941, Danville, Va.) received a BFA in Graphic Design from the Richmond Professional Institute (now Virginia Commonwealth University) in 1965 and an MFA in Photography from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1967. He taught in the Visual Arts Program at Princeton University from 1973 to 2009. He is represented in New York by Pace/MacGill Gallery.

Gowin's work has been included in exhibitions in the U.S. and abroad, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York (1971) and the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. (1983). Gowin's first midcareer retrospective, organized by the Philadelphia Museum of Art, traveled to seven venues (1990–93). Changing the Earth, an exhibition of his aerial work organized by The Yale University Art Gallery, appeared at eight museums across the country (2002–04). A retrospective organized by the MAPFRE Foundation, Madrid, traveled to numerous venues internationally (2012–15).

Gowin is the recipient of numerous awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship (1974), two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships (1977, 1979), the Governor's Award for Excellence in the Arts from the State of Pennsylvania (1983), the Friends of Photography Peer Award (1992), and a Pew Fellowship in the Arts (1993).

Gowin lives and works in Newtown, Pennsylvania.










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