In 1916 Ansel Adams was a photographer who used his work to promote conservation of the wild around the area. He took a trip to Yosemite National Park where he saw more than what lay in the national park, when he looked through the lense he was fascinated. He continued to tay photos of the nature that lay beneath him in Yosemite. Later Adams was on a roll and he then began to learn darkroom techniques. He also read many photography magazines. Ansel Adams also went to photography meetings and he
Cole Weston was the fourth and youngest son out of all his famous brothers. He was inspired to do photography from his other brothers, Brett Weston and Edward Weston. Unlike his brothers, this younger brother was the fame of the 20th century. A 4 by 5 Autoflex camera from his older brother, Brett, started his journey. Weston went to Cornish School in Seattle to graduate with a degree in Theater Arts. Cole had served in the World War II as a photographer, where he probably learned a lot of things
A master photographer, Horst P Horst was seen as one of the foremost influential and contributing photographers of the twentieth century. His work and legacy has shaped fashion, portrait and still life photography for over sixty years and still referenced to this day. Growing up in Germany, Horst Paul Albert Bohrmann, Born on 14 August 1906, was raised in a middle class home with his shop owner parents and brother. During his teens, Horst developed a keen interested in avant-garde art and in the
In 1979 Stephen Shore, "Merced River, Yosemite National Park,” 1930 Walker Evans, "Factory street in Amsterdam, New York,” and in 1941 Dorothea Lange, "Road on the Great White Plains,” these three photographers transformed their landscape photographs into their own distinctive significance through the expression of realism, a movement in modern photography. Shore transforms a common place to an escape, Evans documents the effects of one of the most important historical periods in American social
“Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico” is a famous photograph taken by famed American photographer, Ansel Adams. Adams’ photograph is extraordinary in a way that not many people would have expected from the typical landscape photograph. Usually typical natural landscape photographs are colorful, but this photograph is monochrome. Without having any colors in a photograph is not necessary a bad idea, as Adams has made this photograph alluring and it creates a strong balance of dark and light. This strong
Ansel Adams: A Picture is Worth a Thousand Words On February twentieth, in the year 1902, San Francisco, California became the birth place of one of the greatest artists and environmentalists in American history: Ansel Adams. Growing up in a relatively poor family, Adam’s childhood was marked with many difficulties. Despite that fact, his father, “Charles H. Adams,… who in his own youth had been discouraged from following a passionate love of nature and science, was determined that his son would
on calendars, posters and books, etc. Ansel Adams was a part of new way of photography that was coming along in 19th century to forcing itself from pictoriolism. He was in the group of photographers whose sole purpose was to try to get photography as an art form. So, by doing this they were browning techniques of paintings and fine arts, incorporating into photography, everything from composition to the actual printing techniques. I am very influenced by Ansel as what he did for photography as an
Ansel Adams (1902-1984) was a native of San Francisco. Throughout his childhood days, he often played in the sand dunes outside the Golden Gate. This is where he learned to appreciate nature, and it inspired him to use nature as his scenes for his photographs. He is known for preserving wilderness. He is viewed as an environmental legend and an image of the American West, particularly of Yosemite National Park. His first visit to Yosemite was in 1916. At the age of 17, in 1919, he accepted a position
1. I agree with Ansel Adams. There is so much more to photography then clicking a button. Photography is ideas and creativity through a photo. If I have an idea in my head or a message I want to send across I have to set it up before I even take the picture. There are also many different settings on the camera that help set up a good photo. Photography is a lot of work and different formulas of how everything is set up determines how the photo is going to look. I could be plain with my photography
Preservation for other open places and spaces worthy of protection continued in the early 20th century. Herbert Gleason, Ansel Adams, and other photographers were hired by the government to assess and photograph potential places for inclusion in the national park system as part of the back-to-nature movement to preserve wilderness and conservation of natural resources (see Cahn & Ketchum, 1981; Dilsaver & Tweed, 2009; Nicholas, Bapis, & Harvey, 2003). In the years leading up to World War I, the national