Image for Ansel Adams  : landscapes of the American West

Ansel Adams : landscapes of the American West

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Ansel Adams's legendary photographs inspire an appreciation for natural beauty and conservation that has communicated down the generations.

His ambition was not simply to record the landscape, but to capture his emotional and spiritual response to the wild areas that he loved so deeply.

The results are spectacular: an emotional charge and passion shine through the prints with an intensity that is as powerful today as it was over sixty years ago.

In 1941, Ansel Adams was commissioned by the United States Interior Department to take photographs of the National Parks to be printed as murals for the walls of the new Interior Department building.

This couldn't have been closer to his heart: it combined a commercial assignment with his personal, creative work he referred to as "within".

The "within" was the work that encapsulated his emotional reaction to the landscape - when he, the camera and the landscape were at one.

Unfortunately, the project was curtailed with the outbreak of World War II and the mural was never produced.

The majority of pictures in this book are from the National Parks Mural Project, but also include work from other projects. The Kings Canyon photographs, taken in 1936, were successfully used to lobby for Kings Canyon to be designated a National Park.

There is an exuberant photograph of an apple tree in snow taken at Yosemite, as well as the images taken for a documentary project during the war when Japanese Americans were interned at the Manzanar Relocation Centre.

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£25.00
Product Details
Quercus Publishing
1847246591 / 9781847246592
Hardback
04/09/2008
United Kingdom
English
224 p. : chiefly ill.
43 cm
General (US: Trade) Learn More