ANSEL ADAMS AT THE CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART A new look at an American genius
WASHINGTON, D.C.—For the first time in a decade, an exhibition of photographs
by Ansel Adams will be on view in Washington, D.C. Opening September 15 at
the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Ansel Adams will give visitors a new look at the
work of this important and influential artist through more than 125 images
on loan from The Lane Collection—the largest private collection of works
by Adams in existence. Acquired directly from Adams by the late William H.
and Saundra Lane, during a 10-year period in the early 1960s and 1970s, the
collection showcases Adams’ exceptional range and spans the length of
his six-decade career.
Alongside several of Adams’ iconic landscapes, Ansel Adams will present
rarely exhibited prints —offering new insight into one of the few photographers
in the history of the medium whose name and images enjoy worldwide recognition.
Although best known for his dramatic black and white vistas of the American
West, Adams (1902—1984) was a versatile photographer who made portraits
of artist friends, close-up nature views, striking architectural and urban
views and documentary images. This exhibition takes a broad and inclusive look
at Adams’ work, with particular emphasis on his early career.
“Ansel Adams gives us the opportunity to explore the hidden depths of
an artist known for just a few iconic images. The wide range and high quality
of pictures in The Lane Collection reveal a photographer with many dimensions,
not just the well-known maker of dramatic landscapes,” said Paul Roth,
curator of photography and media arts at the Corcoran Gallery of Art.
Ansel Adams is arranged chronologically in several sections: Early
Work (including
photographs of the High Sierra, Canadian Rockies, and Pueblo Indians), Group
f/64: Exploring Straight Photography, Yosemite, The American Southwest, Alfred
Stieglitz and New York, The National Parks, and Late Work. (See Ansel
Adams Walk-Through Press Release).
ABOUT ANSEL ADAMS
Adams’ photographic style, which fuses romanticism, poetic vision, technical
precision and environmental advocacy, has had an unparalleled influence on
all landscape photography in its wake—and on how Americans see and think
about their country’s wilderness areas.
Born in 1902 to an upper class family in San Francisco, Ansel Adams was an
unusually curious and precocious child. Trained by private tutors after the
age of twelve, he began preparing for a career as a concert pianist. At the
age of fourteen, he simultaneously discovered photography and Yosemite Valley
National Park in California, using his first camera to record views during
a family trip. After his 1928 marriage to Virginia Best, daughter of a Yosemite
concessionaire, Adams devoted himself to photography.
Adams’ earliest landscape photography reflected the prevailing soft-focus “pictorialism” common
to art photography of the time. In 1930 he met New York photographer and filmmaker
Paul Strand, who fused hard-edged modernist aesthetics with social concern
in his pioneering work. Strand’s commitment to photography as a medium
for direct, realistic depiction influenced Adams greatly. By the time of his
first solo museum exhibition at the Smithsonian Institution in 1931, Adams
had found his mature style. In 1932 Adams joined fellow photographers Edward
Weston, Imogen Cunningham, Willard van Dyke, and John Paul Edwards, among others,
to form Group f/64, a coalition of artists devoted to photographic realism.
The modernist evolution of Adams’ technique began a lifetime of dedication
to craft. Adams became a restless and innovative experimentalist, developing
many now-standard photographic practices and reinventing his approach at many
stages in his career.
Adams’ sharply-focused wilderness views became immensely popular, and
his fame spread beyond the art world. His books Making a Photograph: An
Introduction to Photography (1935), and Sierra Nevada: The John Muir
Trail (1938) expanded
his audience from camera hobbyists to a broad public interested in the American
western landscape. Adams’ reputation was further established by a 1936
show at Alfred Stieglitz’s gallery An American Place, and by his inclusion
in the Museum of Modern Art’s first historical survey of the medium in
1937. Throughout that
decade and into the 1950s, Adams photographed the natural scene and promoted
his own work through publications, exhibitions, and personal appearances. Later
books, such as Yosemite and the Sierra Nevada (1948), My Camera
in the National Parks (1950), and This is the American Earth (1960), made Adams the best-known
and most widely respected photographic artist in the world.
Though known principally for his imagery, Adams is perhaps equally important
as a pioneering educator and a tireless crusader for the institutional recognition
of photography as a fine art. He was a driving force behind the establishment
of the photography departments at New York’s Museum of Modern Art and
the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. In 1946 he founded the Department of
Photography at the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco (now the
San Francisco Art Institute). With photographer Minor White and others Adams
created the photo journal Aperture in 1952, and his Yosemite Workshops revolutionized
photographic education from their inception in 1955. In later years Adams continued
to advocate for photography’s acceptance as an art form, co-founding
The Friends of Photography in 1967 and the Center for Creative Photography
in 1975.
Adams is equally recognized for his important role in the development of the
environmental movement in the United States. A longtime member of the Sierra
Club’s board of directors, Adams intended his photographs to inspire
the conservation of natural resources. His art had a great impact on public
policy throughout his career, particularly on the creation of the Kings Canyon
National Park in the Sierra Nevada Mountains of California. His fame gave him
unusual access to national leaders, and he tirelessly lobbied congressmen,
Secretaries of the Interior, and Presidents of the United States from the 1930s
onward.
By the late 1950s Adams’ environmentalism and energetic work on behalf
of the medium began to supersede his own creative work. Experiments with new
techniques, tools, and materials led to diverse types of imagery, and he made
fewer of the iconic landscapes for which he was best known. As demand for his
older work increased, Adams began to print many of his earlier images in a
more graphic style, using dramatic tonal contrasts to recast his original vision
(in the manner, he said, that older musical compositions are reinterpreted by subsequent
generations of musicians). The popularity of these new prints, and the increasing
ubiquity of Adams’ imagery in books and on posters and calendars, played
a significant role in the establishment of a market for fine art photography.
By the time of his death in 1984, Adams was as widely known and celebrated
as any other artist before him.
ABOUT THE EXHIBITION
Ansel Adams is organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, which hosts The
Lane Collection under the supervision of Karen Haas, curator of The Lane
Collection. Haas is co-curator of this exhibition with Rebecca Senf, Assistant
Curator of the Center for Creative Photography in Tucson, Arizona. Ansel
Adams arrives at the Corcoran after an international tour with stops at the
Nagoya/Boston Museum of Fine Arts in Japan; the New Orleans Museum of Art,
Louisiana; the Art Gallery of Ontario in Toronto, Canada; and the Detroit
Institute of Arts in Michigan. Adams photographs from the Corcoran’s
own collection, from the International Museum of Photography at George Eastman
House, and from private collections have been added to the original exhibition,
augmenting the Lane Collection holdings.
EXHIBITION CATALOGUE
A softcover exhibition catalogue, Ansel Adams, is available in the Corcoran
Shop for $40 a copy. Authored by Karen E. Haas and Rebecca A. Senf, the book
is published by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. Based on The Lane Collection,
it offers 100 duotone illustrations spanning the artist’s entire career.
Included alongside Adams’ well-loved views of Yosemite and other national
monuments are lesser-known images, such as a soft-focus picture of a tree
taken when Adams was just 17 years-old, rare depictions of Pueblo Indians
in traditional dress, striking urban and architectural views, portraits of
artists and several of the artist’s rare photographic Japanese-style
folding screens. The extensive text, largely based on unpublished documents
and letters, describes Adams’ influential role in the progress of 20th-century
American photography, his defining experiences in the American Southwest
and his collaboration with the Lanes in forming the collection presented
in Ansel Adams. To purchase online, visit www.corcoran.org/shop.
PRESS PREVIEW
Media are invited to a press preview for Ansel Adams on Wednesday, September
12 at 9 a.m.
HOURS
The Corcoran’s hours of operation are as follows: Monday, Wednesday,
Friday, Saturday and Sunday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Thursday, 10 a.m. to 9
p.m.; closed Tuesday. The hours of operation for the Corcoran’s Café des
Artistes are as follows: Monday, Wednesday, Friday and Saturday from 11:30
a.m. to 2 p.m.; Sunday from 10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Thursday from 11:30 a.m.
to 2 p.m., 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. The hours of operation for the Corcoran’s
Coffee Bar are as follows: Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday from 10 a.m.
to 3 p.m.; Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
TICKETS
Tickets to Ansel Adams cost $14 for adults, $12 for seniors/military and $10
for students. Exhibition ticket prices include Ansel Adams, Annie
Leibovitz: A Photographer’s Life 1990—2005 (opening October 13, 2007) and
general admission. Guests attending Ansel Adams prior to the opening of Annie
Leibovitz will be given a voucher for complimentary admission through the
duration of the exhibition. Further admission information is available at
www.corcoran.org or www.ticketmaster.com. Tickets for Ansel Adams and Annie
Leibovitz go on sale July 15, 2007.
MEMBERSHIP
Corcoran Gallery of Art membership offers special access to the Corcoran's
renowned permanent collection, traveling exhibitions, lectures, films, concerts
and a dazzling array of social events. Members also receive valuable discounts
at the Corcoran Shop, the casually elegant Café des Artistes, and
courses at the Corcoran College of Art + Design.
A Corcoran Member may visit Ansel Adams for free and an unlimited
number of times. Ansel Adams Member Preview Day is September 13, from
9 a.m. to 9 p.m. For more information, contact the membership office at (202)
639.1753 or membership@corcoran.org
or visit www.corcoran.org/membership.
ABOUT THE CORCORAN
The Corcoran Gallery of Art, a privately funded institution, was founded in
1869 as Washington’s first and largest non-federal museum of art. It
is known internationally for its distinguished collection of historical and
modern American art as well as contemporary art, photography, European painting,
sculpture and the decorative arts. Founded in 1890, the Corcoran College
of Art + Design is Washington’s only four-year college of art and design
offering BFA degrees in Photojournalism, Digital Media Design, Fine Art,
Graphic Design and Photography; AFA degrees in Digital Media Design, Fine
Art, Graphic Design and Photography; a five-year Bachelor of Fine Arts/Master
of Arts in Teaching (BFA/MAT); and a two-year Master of Arts (MA) in Interior
Design or History of Decorative Arts. The College’s Continuing Education
program offers part-time credit and non-credit classes for children and adults
and draws more than 2,500 participants each year.
Ansel Adams was organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. This exhibition
is sponsored by Fidelity Investments through the Fidelity Foundation.
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View images and further details from this exhibition
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CONTACT: Kristin Guiter Manager of Media Relations (202) 639-1867, kguiter@corcoran.org

Media Resources:
ANSEL ADAMS, The Lane Collection Corcoran Gallery of Art
PHOTOGRAPHY OFFERINGS AT THE CORCORAN COLLEGE OF ART + DESIGN
ANSEL ADAMS EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS
CORCORAN GALLERY OF ART
ANSEL ADAMS Walk-Through
Corcoran Gallery of Art
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FALL 2007 PHOTOGRAPHY SEASON CLOSES AT THE CORCORAN
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