Ansel Adams Black and White Photographer and Conservationist
71"More than any
other influential American of his epoch, Adams believed in both the
possibility and the probability of humankind living in harmony and
balance with its environment." - William Turnage
Ansel Adams is one of America's premier master photographers and was an avid conservationist. He was born in San Fransisco in 1902 and grew up in house with a view of the Golden Gate Bridge. His signature broken nose, was a result of a fall caused by an aftershock for the 1906 earthquake that nearly devastated the city.
Adams' love for nature started in childhood and turned into a passion that lasted the rest of his life. Adams studied the piano as a child and by young adulthood, he planned on being a concert pianist. Then he discovered photography. His first camera was a Brownie Box camera and he took it on his initial visit to Yosemite. He joined the Sierra Club in 1919 and spent four summers as the caretaker at the Club's Yosemite lodge, LeConte Memorial Lodge. He also met his wife in Yosemite and they were married in 1928.
By the late 1920's Adams decided he could make a better living from photography than from playing the piano. This decision was backed by the publication of his first portfolio. Under the patronage of Albert M. Bender, Adams published the Parmelian Prints of the High Sierra. He had his first one man show in San Fransisco's DeYoung Museum in 1932. In 1933, he had his first show in New York at the Delphic Gallery. His first technical articles were published in "Camera Craft" in 1934 and his first book, Making a Photograph was published in 1935.
Over a career that lasted a lifetime, he left a legacy of black and white prints documenting the great wilderness areas of the western United States. He was an official photographer for the Sierra Club and was on the board of directors for almost 40 years.
Adams was the recipient of three Guggenheim grants which were awarded to him to photographs America's national parks. In 1945 he formed the first Fine Art Photography Studio at the California School of Fine Arts. Over his long career he published many photographic and technical books. He was one of the founders of "Aperture Magazine" and was a frequent contributor to "Arizona Highways Magazine".
Ansel Adams is considered a national institution by environmentalists. In 1980 he received the Presidential Medal of Freedom for "his efforts to preserve this country's wild and scenic areas, both on film and on earth."
The John P. Schaefer Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona, houses Adams' vast collection of corespondance, memorabilia, negatives and many prints. Over his lifetime Adams wrote over 100,000 letters, contributed photgraphs to hundreds of articles and reviews, authored four dozen books, and published eight portfolios of original prints.
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Ansel Adams: 400 Photographs
Price: $21.36
List Price: $40.00 |
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Ansel Adams 2010 Wall Calendar
Price: $11.23
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The Camera (Ansel Adams Photography, Book 1)
Price: $13.00
List Price: $25.00 |
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Ansel Adams in Color
Price: $20.87
List Price: $35.00 |
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Ansel Adams Yellowstone B/W Photo Picture Framed Art Print
Price: $9.99
List Price: $48.00 |
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The Negative (Ansel Adams Photography, Book 2)
Price: $11.00
List Price: $25.00 |
- Masters of Photography: Ansel Adams
- About Ansel Adams > History > Sierra Club
- The Ansel Adams Gallery
Ansel Adams signed original photographs, posters, prints, posthumous photographs - Ansel Adams [1902-1984]
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Walkway over the Lake Art Poster Print, 36x24
Price: $7.95
List Price: $8.00 |
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Black and White Photography, Third Revised Edition
Price: $10.00
List Price: $27.99 |
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Jogger Photography Art Poster Print by Larry Silver, 20x16
Price: $14.99
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The Art of Black and White Photography: Techniques for Creating Superb Images in a Digital Workflow
Price: $24.74
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Ansel Adams Master of Photography in the News
- Carmel's a fairy tale village; touring it on foot is magicalPittsburgh Post-Gazette7 hours ago
CARMEL-BY-THE-SEA, Calif. -- A stroll around this magical bayside town that gained fame in the 1920s as a bohemian art colony is a highlight of any trip to the Monterey Peninsula. ...
- Wild about HarryThe Boston Phoenix5 days ago
Trailblazing along a narrow path What I want to do — what most photographers want to do — is write Harry Callahan a love letter. At the very least, he deserves an elaborate thank-you note for innovating or validating 80 percent of the successful photographs we ever took. ELEANOR (circa 1947) Vastly influential, Callahan expanded the art world's very definition of photography. What I want to do ...
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Haunty says:
7 months ago
Was he an influence on you?