Ansel Adams.
"Ansel Adams was born in San Francisco on 20th February, 1902. His original ambition was to become a concert pianist, but this changed after a trip to Yosemite National Park in 1916 when he took his first photographs.
Adams worked as a photo technician and as a caretaker at the Sierra Club in Yosemite Valley before he was able to become a full-time photographer. His first two collections of landscape photographs, Parmelian Prints of the High Sierras (1927) and Taos Pueblo (1930), were published in limited editions. His first one-man show was held in San Francisco in 1932. This was followed by another in New York in 1936.
Greatly influenced by the work of Paul Strand, Adams was one of the founders with Edward Weston and Imogen Cunningham of the Group f/64. Members of the group tended to use large cameras and small apertures to capture a wider range of different textures.
Throughout his early career, Adams combined commercial assignments and his own work. This includedSierra Nevada: The John Muir Trail (1938); Illustrated guide to Yosemite Valley (1940); a book about the plight of interned Japanese-Americans, Born Free and Equal (1944), Yosemite and the High Sierra (1948) and My Camera in Yosemite Valley (1949). In all, Adams published twenty-four photographic books on the National Parks of America. As one critic has argued: "Adams created a body of work which has come to exemplify not only the purist approach to the medium, but to many people the definitive pictorial statement on the American western landscape."
In 1940 Adams also helped to set up the department of photography at the New York Museum of Modern Art. Four years later he established the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco, the first academic department to teach photography as a profession. He was for a time also a member of the Photo League.
In 1953 Adams collaborated with Dorothea Lange on a photo essay on the Mormons in Utah for Life Magazine. He also established a photography workshop in Yosemite. Ansel Adams died in Carmel, California on 22nd April, in 1984."
I gathered these images because they are all black and white, I wanted to include photography in my museum because photography is important in the words of int_erestingowl "We all like photography. It can serve many purposes. Photography is used to make memories for people, record changes is history and capture beauty. Photography is important because its a way to have visual sense of every aspect of our lives and history." Ansel Adams is a major supporter to this statement. He helped save and preserve Yosemite, he documented it, and now he is one of the worlds most renown artists for doing so. These images tie in together because they all document the beauty of the land. Without him we would not have been exposed to these incredible landscapes.
Adams worked as a photo technician and as a caretaker at the Sierra Club in Yosemite Valley before he was able to become a full-time photographer. His first two collections of landscape photographs, Parmelian Prints of the High Sierras (1927) and Taos Pueblo (1930), were published in limited editions. His first one-man show was held in San Francisco in 1932. This was followed by another in New York in 1936.
Greatly influenced by the work of Paul Strand, Adams was one of the founders with Edward Weston and Imogen Cunningham of the Group f/64. Members of the group tended to use large cameras and small apertures to capture a wider range of different textures.
Throughout his early career, Adams combined commercial assignments and his own work. This includedSierra Nevada: The John Muir Trail (1938); Illustrated guide to Yosemite Valley (1940); a book about the plight of interned Japanese-Americans, Born Free and Equal (1944), Yosemite and the High Sierra (1948) and My Camera in Yosemite Valley (1949). In all, Adams published twenty-four photographic books on the National Parks of America. As one critic has argued: "Adams created a body of work which has come to exemplify not only the purist approach to the medium, but to many people the definitive pictorial statement on the American western landscape."
In 1940 Adams also helped to set up the department of photography at the New York Museum of Modern Art. Four years later he established the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco, the first academic department to teach photography as a profession. He was for a time also a member of the Photo League.
In 1953 Adams collaborated with Dorothea Lange on a photo essay on the Mormons in Utah for Life Magazine. He also established a photography workshop in Yosemite. Ansel Adams died in Carmel, California on 22nd April, in 1984."
I gathered these images because they are all black and white, I wanted to include photography in my museum because photography is important in the words of int_erestingowl "We all like photography. It can serve many purposes. Photography is used to make memories for people, record changes is history and capture beauty. Photography is important because its a way to have visual sense of every aspect of our lives and history." Ansel Adams is a major supporter to this statement. He helped save and preserve Yosemite, he documented it, and now he is one of the worlds most renown artists for doing so. These images tie in together because they all document the beauty of the land. Without him we would not have been exposed to these incredible landscapes.