Sneha Girap (Editor)

Robert Gardner (anthropologist)

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Nationality
  
United States

Period
  
1951-2000


Name
  
Robert Gardner

Role
  
Anthropologist

Robert Gardner (anthropologist) wwwrobertgardnernetstagingwpcontentuploads2

Born
  
Robert Grosvenor Gardner November 5, 1925 Brookline, Massachusetts (
1925-11-05
)

Occupation
  
Academic, Anthropologist, Documentarian

Notable works
  
Dead Birds Forest of Bliss

Relatives
  
Amy Lowell James Russell Lowell Charles Russell Lowell III Robert Traill Spence Lowell Charles Russell Lowell, Sr. Robert Lowell

Died
  
June 21, 2014, Cambridge, Massachusetts, United States

Spouse
  
Adele Pressman (m. ?–2014)

Movies
  
Forest of Bliss, Dead Birds, Rivers of Sand, Ika Hands

Children
  
Caleb Gardner, Noah Gardner, Luke Gardner, Eve Gardner, Stewart Gardner

Books
  
The Impulse to Preserve, Making Dead Birds: Chr, Just Representations, Beauty Contest

Similar People
  
John Marshall, Akos Ostor, Mark Tobey, Peter Matthiessen, Maya Deren

Robert gardner anthropologist


Robert Grosvenor Gardner (November 5, 1925 – June 21, 2014) was an American academic, anthropologist, and documentary filmmaker who was the Director of the Film Study Center at Harvard University from 1956 to 1997. Starting in 1950s, he is known for his work in the field of visual anthropology and films like Dead Birds, and Forest of Bliss. In 2011, a retrospective of his work was held at Film Forum, New York.

Contents

Robert Gardner (anthropologist) wwwrobertgardnernetstagingwpcontentuploads2

What was documentary an elegy for robert gardner


Biography

He was the sixth child and third son, born in the home of his grandmother Isabella Stewart Gardner. He was a cousin of poet Robert Lowell.

After graduating with a Bachelor of Arts degree from Harvard University in 1947, he became an assistant to the founder of the Byzantine Institute of America, Thomas Whittemore at Harvard's Fogg Museum. This led to travels to Anatolia, Fayum and London working with Coptic textiles and restoring Byzantine art Next, he started teaching medieval art and history at the College of Puget Sound in Washington state. Here, he took to writings of anthropologist Ruth Benedict and he ended up post doing MA in anthropology from Harvard. It was during his graduation period that he took part in an expedition on Kalahari Desert Bushmen, for which he took photographs, films and carried out elementary research work. Thereafter he founded The Film Study Center, a production and research unit at the Peabody Museum at Harvard in 1957. Here it made documentary films till he left the centre in 1997.

He lived in Cambridge, MA with wife, Adele Pressman, a psychiatrist, and two children Caleb and Noah Gardner.

The Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology now gives the Harvard University's 'Robert Gardner Fellowship in Photography' worth $US50,000

Filmography

  • Blunden Harbour (1951)
  • Dances of the Kwakiutl (1951)
  • Mark Tobey (1952)
  • The Hunters (1957)
  • Marathon (1964)
  • Dead Birds (1965)
  • Screening Room (1970s), series includes 9 films
  • The Nuer (1971)
  • Mark Tobey Abroad (1973)
  • Rivers of Sand (1973)
  • Altar of Fire (1976)
  • Deep Hearts (1981)
  • Sons of Shiva (1985)
  • Forest of Bliss (1986)
  • Ika Hands (1988)
  • Dancing With Miklos (1993)
  • Passenger (1998)
  • Scully in Malaga (1998)
  • Good to Pull (Bon a Tirer) (2000)
  • Tim Asch
  • John Marshall
  • References

    Robert Gardner (anthropologist) Wikipedia