Blog Post to Illuminations by Nancy Newhall
Ansel Adams: The Eloquent Light
Ansel Adams is most known for his work in the national parks
taking extremely clear images of the beautiful landscape the United States has
to offer. I have known of Ansel Adams
work for a long time, but never really had gone into much of why he took the
photographs he did, or what he wanted to say with them. I always thought focused more on the formal
elements but chose beautiful subjects. I
had always thought that he just wanted to achieve clarity through these places
that couldn’t be captured without photography.
Through Nancy Newhall’s writing I have been enlightened to a different
view of Adams’ work. Adam’s himself had
studied to become a concert pianist and he made an interesting connection
between music and photography that I think is relatable to all people who are
both gifted in music and in art. He stated,
“The negative is the score; the print is the performance.” I am not at all musically inclined, but the
parallel he draws is intriguing. A final
point he makes which made me realize I was interpreting his work all
wrong. Adams says,
“Some photographers
take reality as the sculptors take wood or stone and upon it impose the
dominations of their own thought and spirit.
Others come before reality more tenderly and a photograph to them is an
instrument of love and revelation. A
true photograph need not be explained, nor can be contained in words…my photographs
are presented here as ends in themselves, images of the endless moments of the
world.”
I had always thought that Ansel
Adams’ work was strictly formal and although his pieces have a focus of formal
elements he captures a moment to preserve and show the beauty in it. He doesn’t have any deeper meaning to it, and
he doesn’t impose his views upon his work.
He creates the work to share the moment and the beauty. Adams, to me, seems to think his work is a
higher form of art since it preserves a moment and elevates it through his
photography. I think that although his
work is beautiful, other works that say something about reality or change a viewer’s
perception of it is still an art form that can be elevated as high as his
work. Especially because I am an
illustrator and a visual storyteller I enjoy pieces that make me think
differently or take formal elements to tell a story.
1 comment:
I definitely agree with you; I think that work that says something is important too. But I also think that mainstream art culture sort of agrees that work that says something is important, and that Ansel Adams' philosophy, art being purely visual and beautiful, is not as popular in contemporary conversations about art. So I think this piece was important to read, especially for art students learning to make work that says something.
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