Anne Noggle

Anne Noggle (1922 August 16, 2005) was an American aviator. She served as a WASP during World War II and later made a career for herself as a photographer.

Early years

Noggle was born in Evanston, Illinois, in 1922, and died in Albuquerque, New Mexico on August 16, 2005 at the age of 83. She set a goal of becoming a pilot after seeing Amelia Earhart at an air show in Chicago. When she was 17, her mother, a bookstore manager, agreed to let her take flying lessons.

WASP of World War II

At 21, Noggle traveled to Sweetwater, Texas, to train to become one of the Women Airforce Service Pilots (WASP). She graduated in the class of 44-W-1. She flew missions in 1943 and 1944. The WASP were disbanded in late 1944. After the war, she became a crop-duster in the Southwest and flew stunts in an aerial circus.

When the Air Force offered commissions to former WASPs in 1953, she applied and was a pilot during the Korean War. She retired as a captain in 1959 when she developed emphysema.[1][2]

While in the Air Force, Noggle had been stationed in Paris. She visited the Louvre, which ignited an artistic impulse.

Education

Noggle went back to school, at the University of New Mexico; she earned a bachelor's degree in fine art in 1966 and in 1969 graduated with a Masters in Art. She developed her skills as a photographer and developed an interest in documenting the aging process of women – including her own “witty and challenging” self-portraits.[3]

The University of New Mexico gave her an honorary doctorate, acknowledging her “extensive contribution to the field of art and art history.”[3]

Photography career

Influenced by female photographers such as Julia Margaret Cameron and Diane Arbus, Noggle's work mainly focused on the aging process of women, a subject which she referred to as "the saga of the fallen flesh".[4] Using humor and pathos to depict the women she photographed, Noggle photographed her subjects in a way that displayed both femininity and sexual energy. Perhaps her most famous series of photographs was taken in 1975, when she photographed herself after receiving a facelift. Her ability to find beauty using bizarre subject matter typified her career as a photographer.[5]

Noggle was 48 when she had her first one-woman show, at a gallery in Taos, N.M., in 1970.[1]

Noggle was Curator of Photography at the New Mexico Museum of Art from 1970-76.[6]

National Endowment for the Arts Grants

John Simon Guggenheim Memorial fellowship

In 1982, Noggle was awarded the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial fellowship.[7]

Career in education

Noggle accepted a position of adjunct professor of Art at the University of New Mexico and taught there from 1970 to 1984.

Legacy

The Harn Museum at the University of Florida presented an exhibition of Noggle's photographs from June 26, 2012 to March 10, 2013. Its title was Anne Noggle: Reality and the Blind Eye of Truth.[8] Noggle's work is in the permanent collections of several art museums, including New Mexico Museum of Art,[9] Albuquerque Museum, California Museum of Photography, Denver Art Museum, Minneapolis Institute of the Arts, and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Publications

In 1975 Noggle co-curated an exhibition and catalog for the San Francisco Museum of Art, Women of Photography: An Historical Survey. This exhibition was credited with introducing the work of American women photographers to a broader audience.[10]

In 1983 UNM Press published Silver Lining, which showcased Noggle’s photographs documenting the challenges she and other women in America faced as they grew older.

She made portraits of her fellow WASPs as older women in the book For God, Country and the Thrill of It: Women Airforce Service Pilots in World War II (1990).

A Dance with Death, telling the story of the Soviet airwomen of World War II, was published in 1994. Noggle had traveled to the Soviet Union to photograph and record the stories of these women.[11]

Quotes

Referring to why she photographs older women:

“I like older faces, not because of aging itself, but rather the look of the face, the revelation of life, and the conflict between what was and what they are now. That interests me, not the idea of aging itself.”[12]

“I find young faces a tabula rasa, nothing is written there. They are empty until they reach their 40s. Then they become photographable.”[5]

References