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24/7/02
Ansel Adams
The American photographer Ansel Adams died as long ago as 1984
yet his photographs are timeless. This is partly because they never
carry human imagery. Instead, they reflect the majesty of nature,
as most Americans would want to recall it. The new exhibition just
opened at the Hayward Gallery (through 22 September) will equally
draw in British queues. The one most profitable image in the entire
history of photography is reputed to be Moonrise, Hernandez,
New Mexico (1941). Adams did not live to experience the powerful
effect that his work had on the US conservation movement, but he
could surmise it. He knew the power of the photograph, and recalled
how the earlier photographs of Carlton Watkins ensured that Congress
would reserve, in 1864, the Yosemite Valley as a protected area.
Today he is commemorated by the Ansel Adams Wilderness area, some
230,000 acres of untarnished landscape, which accrued to the John
Muir Wilderness and Yosemite National Park in 1984. Adams, after
all, kept alive the Jeffersonian pastoral dream continuing the tradition
of the American sublime. But unlike the work of the 19th century
American landscapists, which invariably followed the tradition of
representative human figures (however diminutive), for Adams the
landscape was all.
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