Emmet Gowin | Baldwin Street: Photographs 1966–1994 is on view at Pace Gallery from March 12 through April 25, 2026. Installed at the gallery’s West 25th Street space, the exhibition coincides with the release of a new publication by Princeton University Press devoted to this deeply personal body of work. The presentation unfolds alongside the annual gathering of the photography world during AIPAD’s Photography Show in New York, situating Gowin’s early vision within a broader contemporary dialogue.
The Baldwin Street series centers on the family of Gowin’s wife, Edith Morris, in Danville, Virginia. Named after the quiet dead-end street where many relatives lived, the photographs trace decades of shared experience—children at play, sisters in conversation, figures resting in yards or framed by modest interiors. Edith appears often: seated in a bedroom suffused with soft light, balanced on a ladder outdoors, absorbed in thought. Reva Booher Morris and extended family members inhabit the images with an ease born of trust. These works reveal not spectacle but familiarity, an intimacy that shaped Gowin’s artistic coming of age.
Drawn from the artist’s archive and printed for the first time in recent years, many of the photographs remained unseen for decades. Their rediscovery underscores the continuity within Gowin’s six-decade career. Though later celebrated for aerial views of nuclear test sites, volcanic landscapes such as Mount St. Helens, and environmental studies across Europe and the American West, his practice begins with sustained attention to home. Baldwin Street stands as a spiritual and emotional center from which his broader meditations on humanity and the natural world unfold.
Gowin’s photographs reside in major museum collections, including the Museum of Modern Art and the National Gallery of Canada. Yet within this exhibition, the focus returns to a small Virginia street, where gesture, light, and kinship coalesce into images of enduring tenderness and quiet gravity.
Image:
Emmet Gowin, Reva and Edith, Danville, Virginia, 1970 © Emmet Gowin