ANSEL ADAMS
Photographer
1902 - 1984
Ansel Adams was born
February 20, 1902 in San Francisco, California.
His father was Charles Adams, and his mother was named Olive.
In the earthquake on April 18, 1906, the Adams' house was damaged, but
they were still able to live in it. Most of the inhabitants of the city
were left homeless. In an aftershock
the young boy Ansel, then four years old, was tossed around and his
nose was broken. For the rest of his life he had a crooked nose.
His family was wealthy when he was young, but they suffered
financial reverses and went from having a cook, a maid, and a governess
to doing everything for themselves when they could no longer afford to
hire help.
Ansel was homeschooled by his father and his Aunt Mary until
he was nine years old.
Then he was put in various schools, but he did not do well. He was a
very nervous, hyperactive child. His father saw something special in
his son and did his best to nurture him. He removed him from the school
and hired tutors to teach him algebra and Greek.
Ansel became interested in the piano, taught himself to play, and began
to take lessons. Music provided the structure that had been missing in
his life. He learned how to play in a couple of months and his father
bought for him a $6,000 piano, paying it out by installments.
When he was thirteen his father bought him a one-year pass to San
Francisco's Panama Pacific International Exposition.
This would be his schooling for a year. He went to the exposition every
day. It was at the Exposition that he first saw displays of art and
pictorial photography.
The following year he was captivated
by a book he saw about Yosemite, then his parents took him on a trip to
Yosemite. First they traveled by train, then by bus to reach the area.
His parents gave him a Kodak Brownie box camera with which he took
pictures at Yosemite. This trip was actually the turning point in his
life.
Back at home he would practice the piano for six hours a day.
He had decided to become a concert pianist, then in the summer he would
return to the mountains. While he was in the mountains the only place
he had to practice the piano was at Best's Studio owned by Harry Best.
Harry also had a daughter named Virginia, who eventually
became Ansel's wife. He was twenty-six years old when they were
married.
He and Virginia moved into a little house at the back of the studio and
raised their two children there. Best's Studio would later become known
as the Ansel Adam's Gallery.
He continued with his work as a professional
photographer, and after having some success at selling some portfolios
of his prints, he saw he would be able to make a better living as a
photographer than as a concert pianist. He experimented with different
filters on his camera and different ways of developing the prints. His
photographs became works of art. By 1935 he was recognized as one of
the best photographers in America. Wealthy people began to hire him to
make portraits of their families and pictures of their homes.
Ansel Adams specialized
in black and white photography. Sometimes
it would take him a whole day to print a picture to make it look
exactly as he wanted it. One of his most famous prints is Moonrise (use the right arrows to
view other prints) .
Alfred Stieglitz offered him a one-man show in New York. It was the
opportunity of a lifetime. He worked so hard that summer preparing for
exhibits he worked himself to exhaustion. It took him months to
recover.
Adams had been active in the Sierra Club
since he was a teenager, and now he was on the board of directors. In
this way he helped to preserve the environment. His book of photographs,
Sierra Nevada: the John Muir Trail, when given to President
Theodore Roosevelt helped to influence him to support King's Canyon as
a national park.
The Department of the Interior commissioned him to make a set of
murals. They are featured in a book Ansel Adams: The National Park Service
Photographs.
Adams published numerous books of his photographic work and books about
photography. To share his knowledge he held workshops to teach people
photography. He was a great teacher.
In 1980 President Jimmy Carter awarded him the Presidential
Medal of Freedom which is the nation's highest honor given to a
civilian.
In 1983 he visited his beloved Yosemite for the last time and died the
next year on April 22, 1984. He was 82 years old.
Six months after his
death Congress set aside some land in the Sierra Nevada area of
California they named "Ansel Adams Wilderness", and a mountain
was named in his honor, "Mount Ansel Adams".
Biography at
gardenofpraise.com