As
a young man, Ansel Adams was seized by his passions for
art and nature that would lead him to become one of the
greatest photographers of the Twentieth Century as well
as one of the world's most influential conservationists.
Born in San Francisco and trained initially as a concert
pianist, he published the first of his many books, Taos
Pueblo, in 1930.
In his early years the American West and Southwest were
his primary areas of interest and exploration, but later
his fascination for the wilderness -- or, as he once
called it, "the grandeur and potentials of the one
and only world in which we inhabit" -- would take
him from the rocky coast of Maine to the remotest peaks
of Alaska.
His commitment to his art also led him to write the
classic Basic Photo Books series; to help set up the
first photographic art department of a museum at the
Museum of Modern Art, and to found the first college of
photography, at the California School of Fine Art.
Shortly after his death, a mountain in his beloved
Yosemite was named for him and the Ansel Adams Wilderness
established, a fitting tribute this consummate chronicler
and champion of the wild.
(c)1995 Graphique de France |