OT: Ansel Adams Exhibit

Is everyone aware that Adams was a rangefinder-camera user?

During the 1930s he used a Contax to make fairly edgy environmental portraits of some of the prominent West Coast artists of the day. I recall seeing them in a large traveling Adams exhibit a number of years ago, and remember that they were some of my favorite works in it. (Of course, I was a bit biased...)

I don't know if any of those are in the Lane collection, but I hope so.
 
There is one 35mm shot in the Lane Exhibition. However, I think it was taken in the 70's. There is no information as to what kind of 35mm camera was used.

-Paul
 
Ansel's work is a crucial reference point, whether or not we aspire to that sort of thing. I don't, but he was one of the first several photographers I'd heard of by name...along with Weston and Bullock and Callahan.

His enthusiasts rarely mention the mediocre work he produced for Polaroid , the Ansel Adams Edition of Maxwell House Coffee (Half Dome on the can), or decorative mural-sized folding screens that he "reluctantly" printed from Polaroid PN negatives.

They don't seem to know about his book on pre-strobe artificial lighting (I have it, signed for me by him: fascinating), his Hasselblad work, or his industrial photography.

And they don't properly emphasize that he was an aggressive Sierra Club Member...a fierce environmentalist.

He was a genuine professional photographer, not the starry-eyed artistic saint he's made out to be.... 😀
 
I saw it yesterday, too. The exhibit's organized chronologically, and it's remarkable how he progressed. Of course he was a natural talent, but his earliest work, also pre-Group F/64, being soft-focused and printed on a paper giving it an 'albumen' look, certainly isn't dazzling. By the mid-1930s, though, he had gained the impressive control of his exposure/development that gives the 3-dimensional quality that can't be burned and dodged into a print. The prints have to be seen in person.

He also started as a pianist, and intended to make a living concertising. There's a small room that loops a short video biography, which has a sample of his playing in the 1970s. If he had decided to go that route, the world would be no worse for wear - he was fairly good at that, too. One of his well-known quotes makes the analogy that the negative is like the music score and the print is like the performance.

It makes a good parallel to Richard Wagner, who started as a fairly competent poet and journalist; although Wagner published several books and commentaries inbetween writing music-dramas, while I don't think Adams gave any significant public music performances; he was too busy climbing 13,000-foot mountains with his 8x10.

They were both activists, as well. Adams was an active environmentalist and was part of the American Socialist movement during the 1920s and 30s. Wagner was an active Socialist, as well, and in addition to publishing volumes of articles and commentaries on this during the 19th Century, he participated in both Dresden uprisings in 1848, either making hand-grenades or running reconnaissance.

Rob
 
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The coffe can and folding screens are there. I was a little surprised. I didn't know that he did those things.

Another curiosity is a photo of him with his first camera, a box Brownie. The museum souvenir shop was selling a similar looking Ansco box camera which was really a purse. I think it was around $50. Considering that you can buy the real camera on e-Bay for about $5, it is a remarkable if somewhat silly souvenir.

Nonetheless, I'm glad I saw the exhibit while I was in town.

-Paul
 
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