1. Rockwell Museum hosts Ansel Adams: Celebration of Genius

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    artwork: Ansel Adams, Half Dome, Moonrise, Yosemite Valley, 1945, gelatin silver print Corning, NY - The Rockwell Museum of Western Art is proud to announce Ansel Adams: Celebration of Genius, which will open June 8, 2006 and will be on exhibit through September 4, 2006. Adams is among the few photographers in history whose name and work enjoy worldwide recognition. His stunning landscapes and intimate still lifes of nature continue to captivate viewers. While many come to know his work through widely published books, postcards, posters, and calendars, relatively few have actually seen his lushly printed original images. Inspired by the 100th anniversary of Adams's birth in 2002, the George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film, Rochester, NY, revisited its extensive collection of Adams's work, creating a new exhibition of 150 photographs that reflects Adams's full career. Ansel Adams: Celebration of Genius presents work from the 1920s through the 1960s, including an early 1927 portfolio (one of only fifty produced) of Parmelian prints (gelatin silver emulsion on parchment paper). This is the first time George Eastman House has included this portfolio from its collection in an exhibition. Featured are many of Adams's most famous images of the American West - Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, 1941, Mount Williamson from Manzanar, California, ca. 1944, and Monolith, the Face of Half Dome, 1927. But prepare to discover equally stupendous, (if less well-known) images such as Mud Hills, Arizona or Water and Foam, or the wonderful abstract titled simply, Stained Wallpaper Near Alturas, Calif. Adams did not confine himself to landscapes, but also made portraitsand other subjects as humble as fence posts into images nearly as monumental as his beloved mountain ranges. artwork: Ansel Adams, Oak Tree, Snow Storm, Yosemite Valley, CA, 1948, gelatin silver print About Adams Adams's life story is as varied as his work. His role as an artist, ardent conservationist, writer and educator all had their roots in Yosemite. This is where he came to create, seek solace in difficult times, and where he met his wife, Virginia Best - along with other artists, mountaineers and Sierra Club activists. Yosemite and the Sierra Nevada were the subjects of his first portfolio, Parmelian Prints of the High Sierras (sic) in 1927, a portfolio of prints on view for the first time as part of this exhibition. A gifted musician with ambitions to be a concert pianist, Adams struggled with which career to follow: music or photography. In 1930 he acceded to the lure of a life outdoors in pursuit of photography. From 1930 until the early 1970s, Adams, like many of his contemporaries - including Edward Weston and Paul Strand - accepted commercial assignments to support his family. These ranged from department store catalogs, car advertisements and marketing brochures to giant Coloramas for Eastman Kodak Company, murals for the Department of the Interior, LIFE and FORTUNE magazine work, and testing film for the Polaroid Corporation. Adams worked in color and black and white, but he never considered his commercial work part of his art. In the course of his long life, he would produce eight portfolios and have work in more than 500 exhibitions. A prolific writer, he published thirty-seven books and hundreds of articles about photography. Adams cared deeply about the wilderness and was an ardent environmental conservationist. He would serve on the Sierra Club board of directors for 37 years and was active in the Wilderness Society. His photographs were used in support of many environmental issues. Adams personally lobbied several presidents and Congress on behalf of wilderness preservation. He received many national and international awards, honorary degrees, three Guggenheim Fellowships, and had a wilderness area and a mountain named after him. He is the only photographer to be given the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the highest civilian honor, which he received in 1980. Ansel Adams died in Carmel, California, on April 22, 1984. About the Rockwell Museum of Western Art Preserved and interpreted at the Rockwell Museum of Western Art, American Western and Native American art are the focal point for engaging, dynamic exhibitions and educational events. Visit us online at www.rockwellmuseum.org


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