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[OM] Re: Adams, was Analog Forever

Subject: [OM] Re: Adams, was Analog Forever
From: Winsor Crosby <wincros@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Date: Sun, 6 Feb 2005 21:15:53 -0800
There was a book published in conjunction with the exhibit. They do 
milk every aspect of the money end of things. It is called, like the 
exhibit, "Ansel Adams at 100" by Szarokowski who provides outstanding 
commentary. It is a beautiful book covered in linen with a slip case 
and beautiful printing of the images that is very close to the prints 
that hung on the wall of the museum. If you really like Adams it is 
probably worth the cost.



Winsor
Long Beach, California, USA
On Feb 6, 2005, at 2:34 PM, Jeff Keller wrote:

>
> Has anyone seen a book showing the progression?
>
> I must not be very discerning. Before I could afford a camera, Ansel's
> pictures amazed me. I've seen many of the books with his reproductions 
> and
> I've seen "his" prints in Yosemite many times (most or perhaps all of 
> which
> were printed by assistants). Although there are some I like much more 
> than
> others, there are very very few that I don't like. I don't remember 
> that
> dramatic of a difference between the good books and the actual prints. 
>  Also
> his photograph exhibit up at the S.F. Museum of Art didn't make me 
> feel the
> prints in Yosemite were especially inferior. I only vaguely remember a 
> few
> comments at the S.F. exhibit regarding his progression. I'm very 
> curious
> about descriptions of the changes.
>
> TIA,
> -jeff
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Winsor Crosby" <wincros@xxxxxxxxxxx>
> To: <olympus@xxxxxxxxxx>
> Sent: Sunday, February 06, 2005 9:21 AM
> Subject: [OM] Re: Adams, was Analog Forever
>
>
>>
>> Adams changed his style as he matured. His early prints while very 
>> good
>> was similar to prints of the era. And he made a lot of them. As he got
>> older he achieved the vision that he became known for. Sometimes he
>> redid some of his early prints and they are dramatically different.
>> There was a traveling retrospective about two years ago and it showed
>> that clearly. Many of his early prints looked not unlike the best
>> photography of the previous century.
>>
>> His genius besides making some beautiful images, I think, is that he
>> found photography in a particular state and pushed it forward so that
>> everyone who is serious about it cannot ignore what he did. Well, at
>> least until automatic everything.
>>
>>
>> Winsor
>> Long Beach, California, USA
>> On Feb 6, 2005, at 3:23 AM, Andrew Gullen wrote:
>>
>>>
>>> I've only seen one, but had the same reaction.
>>>
>>> I'd looked though books of reproductions, and thought they were very
>>> nice,
>>> but then saw "Moonrise, Hernandez" at the National Gallery. My jaw
>>> dropped.
>>>
>>> Andrew
>>>
>>> on 2005/02/04 1:42 AM, Earl Dunbar at edunbar@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
>>>
>>>> Interesting.  Each time I've seen original Adams prints, I've been
>>>> blown
>>>> away.
>
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