black and white photographers II
Emmet Gowin was born on December 22, 1941. He went to Virginia Commonwealth University and married his wife, Edith Morris. Gowin attended the Rhode Island School of design. Three years later he had a solo exhibition at the Dayton Art Institution. His early photos were inspired by his family.
In 1973, Gowin was invited by Peter Bunnell to teach photography at Princeton University. He taught there for the next twenty five years. In 1974 he received the Guggenheim Fellowship and that allowed him to travel in Europe taking photos. He was awarded the National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship as well as the Pew Fellowship for the Arts for his work.
In 1980, the Seattle Arts Commission granted him a fellowship to travel to Washington and the Pacific Northwest. He took several photos of Mount St. Helen after the eruption. The Queen Noor of Jordan invited Gowin in 1982 to take photos of historic places in that country. He retired from teaching at Princeton in 2009. Gowin and his wife live in Pennsylvania. He has three books of his photography.
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