When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Ansel Adams - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ansel_Adams

    Adams was born in the Fillmore District of San Francisco, the only child of Charles Hitchcock Adams and Olive Bray.He was named after his uncle, Ansel Easton. His mother's family came from Baltimore, where his maternal grandfather had a successful freight-hauling business but lost his wealth investing in failed mining and real estate ventures in Nevada. [2]

  3. Group f/64 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_f/64

    Ansel Adams: Half Dome, Apple Orchard, Yosemite trees with snow on branches, April 1933 Exhibition poster. Group f /64 or f.64 was a group founded by seven American 20th-century San Francisco Bay Area photographers who shared a common photographic style characterized by sharply focused and carefully framed images seen through a particularly Western (U.S.) viewpoint.

  4. Aperture Foundation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aperture_Foundation

    Aperture Foundation is a nonprofit arts institution, founded in 1952 by Ansel Adams, Minor White, Barbara Morgan, Dorothea Lange, Nancy Newhall, Beaumont Newhall, Ernest Louie, Melton Ferris, and Dody Warren. Their vision was to create a forum for fine art photography, a new concept at the time.

  5. Aperture (magazine) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aperture_(magazine)

    The magazine was founded in 1952 by a consortium of photographers and proponents of photography: Ansel Adams, Melton Ferris, Dorothea Lange, Ernest Louie, Barbara Morgan, Beaumont Newhall, Nancy Newhall, Dody Warren, and Minor White. [2] It was the first journal since Alfred Stieglitz’s Camera Work to explore photography as a fine art. [3]

  6. Friends of Photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Friends_of_Photography

    Friends of Photography was a nonprofit organization started by Ansel Adams and others in 1967 to promote photography as a fine art. During its existence the organization held at least 330 photography exhibitions at its galleries in Carmel and San Francisco, California, and it published a lengthy series of monographs under the name Untitled.The organization was formally dissolved in 2001.

  7. Center for Creative Photography - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Center_for_Creative...

    Interior of the center. The Center for Creative Photography (CCP), established in 1975 and located on the University of Arizona's Tucson campus, is a research facility and archival repository containing the full archives of over sixty of the most famous American photographers including those of Edward Weston, Harry Callahan and Garry Winogrand, as well as a collection of over 80,000 images ...

  8. Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moonrise,_Hernandez,_New...

    Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico (1941) by Ansel Adams. Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico is a black-and-white photograph taken by Ansel Adams, late in the afternoon on November 1, 1941, [1] from a shoulder of highway US 84 / US 285 in the unincorporated community of Hernandez, New Mexico, United States. [2]

  9. Russell and Sigurd Varian - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russell_and_Sigurd_Varian

    Cowell was also a music tutor of Ansel Adams, and the Varian family in turn became friends with Adams, [12] who became friends with Russell and Sigurd through their mutual activity in the Sierra Club. [5] Adams knew the family for more than 30 years, [12] and was a hiking companion of Russell's; the pair made many trips into the Sierras. [13]