Gretchen Garner was an American art historian, curator, writer, teacher and self-taught photographer.
Biography
Education
Garner was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota. She enrolled at the University of Chicago in 1965 and received her BA in Art History. After graduating, Garner spent a year studying photography on her own with her father’s 35mm camera. Between 1973–75, Garner studied photography at the School of Art institute in Chicago where she took her MFA.
During Garners later life, she continued to write scholarly articles, exhibition catalogs and books. Her last book was Winold Reiss and the Cincinnati Union Terminal where Garner reawakens Reiss’ full-color images of the mosaic murals in the Cincinnati Union Terminal. In the 1980s, Garner was inspired by the countryside around Chicago and which inspired her to take up outdoor photography. She then travel around the USA and Europe for a decade. Some of the landscapes Garner portrayed included Denmark, Sweden and France. During the 1980s she also served as the Head, Department of Art at the University of Connecticut from 1989-1992 and served as a Professor there until 1994. From there, Garner transferred to Moore College of Art and Design to become an Academic Dean until 1997. Garner was an adjunct professor as well as visiting artist for The Ohio State University between 2003–2007. From 2007–2017 Garner resided back to her residence in Columbus, Ohio until she passed away at the age of 77.
Garner’s contribution to feminist art history is especially notable. Her exhibition Reclaiming Paradise: American Women Photograph the Land was widely popular, traveling to thirteen different location sites within two years. This catalog traces the lives of nineteenth-and twentieth-century women and their relationship with the landscape. Garner redressed the exclusion of women from the landscape canon throughout her writing. Her catalog for this exhibition became a primary source on women and modern American photography.
Contemporary Landscape Photography: "The New Metaphorics"
In opposition to William Jenkins’s New Topographics gambit, Garner advocated for a “New Metaphorics.” Garner, along with photographer and critic Deborah Bright, critiqued the work of the New Topographics as having a macho undertone. Garner’s work showcased her own perspectives on documentary photography. The debate over documentary landscape photography remains an important component in contemporary landscape photography, but especially that of the 1970-80’s.
Publications
Disappearing Witness: Change in Twentieth-Century American Photography. Johns Hopkins Press, 2003.