Elijah Gowin

Elijah Gowin is an American art photographer and Professor and Chair of the Department of Art and Art History at the University of Missouri-Kansas City.[1] He was a 2008 Guggenheim Fellow, during which he worked on a series of photographs, Of Falling and Floating. He is the son of photographer Emmet Gowin, himself a Guggenheim Fellow.[2]

Biography

He was born in 1967 in Dayton, Ohio.[3] He graduated from Davidson College in 1990 with a BA in Art History, and was awarded an MFA in photography from the University of New Mexico (1996). Since then he has taught at University of Tennessee, Chattanooga, St. Mary's College of Maryland, and University of Missouri, Kansas City.[2][4] He acted as a judge for the University of North Dakota's juried photography exhibit Of Memory, Bone and Myth in 2010.[5][6]

Of Falling and Floating

Of Falling and Floating is a series of photographs of people falling, made by collaging scanned photographs and images from the internet and reprinting them as paper negatives.[7] It was exhibited in 2009 at the Griffin Museum of Photography as part of a show called Pull of Gravity.[2][8] Mark Feeney suggested the images could be read either as representing either negative emotions like "anxiety and dislocation" or positively as images of "buoyancy, even jubilation".[7]

Other work

His other series of photographs include Hymnal of Dreams,[3] Watering, and Lonnie Holley. Watering used collaged digital images themed around baptism.[9] He has had solo shows at Contemporary Art Center of Virginia (Virginia Beach, VA), Vermont Center of Photography (Brattleboro, VT), and the Light Factory (Charlotte, NC).[4] His work is in the collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art,[10] Corcoran Gallery of Art, and the Center for Creative Photography.[11]

Publications

Maggie (2009) was a book of photographs by Gowin and his father Emmet Gowin.[12]

gollark: Anyway, the best mathematical thing for central planning is apparently "linear programming", and to make that useful you need to decide on (in some form) the "value" of each output of your production.
gollark: Tech companies are interesting because they can service tons of people with few workers.
gollark: Google just has to keep services up for them and mine their data.
gollark: They don't have to manage every detail of the stuff that goes to them, though.
gollark: I'm not sure about that, most of them deal with less stuff and fewer people.

References

  1. "About". elijah gowin. Retrieved 2019-02-17.
  2. "Elijah Gowin". Guggenheim Foundation. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  3. Thomas, Mary (March 10, 2000). "Weekend Art Preview: An unseen world Elijah Gowin's photography taps into the supernatural". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  4. Dow, Jim. "Elijah Gowin". Boston University. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  5. "'Of Memory, Bone and Myth'". Grand Forks Herald. April 21, 2010.
  6. "Elijah Gowin's 'of Falling And Floating' At Robert Mann, New York". Saatchi Art Magazine. May 12, 2007. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  7. Feeney, Mark (February 7, 2009). "Father-and-son photographers reimagine the elements". Boston Globe. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  8. Cortellucci, Romina S. (September 2, 2012). "Take a Drop with the Elijah Gowin 'Of Falling and Floating' Series". Trend Hunter. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  9. Shearer, Benjamin F (2008). Culture and Customs of the United States: Culture. Greenwood. p. 355.
  10. "Elijah Gowin". LACMA. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  11. Pasulka, Nicole. "Between Floating and Falling". The Morning News. Retrieved 6 July 2015.
  12. Platt, Stacy (2009-01-14). "One Thing Done Two Ways: Elijah Gowin and James Luckett on Making..." the space in between. Retrieved 2019-02-17.
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