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William Garnett

William Garnett

1916 - 2006

Well known for his aerial photographs, William Garnett first worked as an architectural and advertising photographer, as well as a police photographer, in Pasadena, California. ...

William Garnett

Biography

Well known for his aerial photographs, William Garnett first worked as an architectural and advertising photographer, as well as a police photographer, in Pasadena, California. He was also an Army Signal Corps cameraman during World War II. Garnett once told the story of how he became interested in making photographs from he air: “In 1945, like every other GI, I was anxious to get home as quickly as possible. I went out to Newark (N.J.) airport to hitch a ride back on a troop transport. That plane was full, but the crew let me sit in the navigator’s seat, and the view was perfect. It was my first cross-country flight, and I decided right then that I had to photograph this great and beautiful land from the air” (Life, 15 Mar, 1968, p. 3).

Garnett, who taught design at the University of California (Berkeley), used the aerial view to capture the abstract shapes, patterns, colors and textures of nature and cities. These become, independent of their origins, complex and beautiful images. He conceived and executed the largest project by a single photographer on one subject in Life’s history – nine twenty-page essays on the beauty of the United States as seen from the air (1965).

John Szarkowski wrote: “If technically competent, aerial photographs are seldom truly uninteresting; no matter how thoughtlessly made they almost always contain in their details or their patterns some surprising revelation that enriches our knowledge and our sense of landscape. On the other hand, aerial photographs that possess true coherence of intention and resolution are rare, and a remarkable number of those that hold firm in our memories were made by William A. Garnett. Garnett is not a flyer who makes photographs, but a photographer who flies. His plane’s function is to hold his camera in precisely the right spot at precisely the right moment, in order to achieve not a map but a picture” (Scarkowski, Looking, p. 170).

During 10,000 hours of flying, Garnett mastered the skill of simultaneously piloting a plane with his foot while photographing out the window-traveling above every state and many parts of the world. His light 1956 Cessna plane allowed him the flexibility to angle easily and capture subjects with precision. At first, he experimented with a variety of camera formats and films but found that two cameras – a 35mm and Pentax 6×7 (one loaded with black-and-white film and the other with color film) – best suited his artistic needs.
Garnett’s work truly defies the stereotype of aerial photography as purely scientific and devoid of artistry. He became the first aerial photographer to earn the prestigious Guggenheim Award (in time he would be the recipient of three) and his photographs shown in countless major museums around the world.

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