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Photography
Related: About this forumBNSF Line through the Chapadera Wilderness Area
Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge
San Antonio, New Mexico - ©2024 Bo Zarts Studio
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BNSF Line through the Chapadera Wilderness Area (Original Post)
Bo Zarts
Jan 2
OP
erronis
(17,408 posts)1. Great shot. I love the B&W contrasts. Just reading Ansel Adams great entry in Wikipedia.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ansel_Adams
I got hooked into reading this piece after seeing the official White House photos he shot for Jimmy Carter. I've visited several of his well-known photographic sites before but hadn't realized how skilled and innovative he was.
Group f/64
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_f/64
I got hooked into reading this piece after seeing the official White House photos he shot for Jimmy Carter. I've visited several of his well-known photographic sites before but hadn't realized how skilled and innovative he was.
Ansel Easton Adams (February 20, 1902 April 22, 1984) was an American landscape photographer and environmentalist known for his black-and-white images of the American West. He helped found Group f/64, an association of photographers advocating "pure" photography which favored sharp focus and the use of the full tonal range of a photograph. He and Fred Archer developed a system of image-making called the Zone System, a method of achieving a desired final print through a technical understanding of how the tonal range of an image is the result of choices made in exposure, negative development, and printing.
Adams was a life-long advocate for environmental conservation, and his photographic practice was deeply entwined with this advocacy. At age 14, he was given his first camera during his first visit to Yosemite National Park. He developed his early photographic work as a member of the Sierra Club. He was later contracted with the United States Department of the Interior to make photographs of national parks. For his work and his persistent advocacy, which helped expand the National Park system, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980.
Adams was a key advisor in the founding and establishment of the photography department at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, an important landmark in securing photography's institutional legitimacy. He helped to stage that department's first photography exhibition, helped found the photography magazine Aperture, and co-founded the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona.
Adams was a life-long advocate for environmental conservation, and his photographic practice was deeply entwined with this advocacy. At age 14, he was given his first camera during his first visit to Yosemite National Park. He developed his early photographic work as a member of the Sierra Club. He was later contracted with the United States Department of the Interior to make photographs of national parks. For his work and his persistent advocacy, which helped expand the National Park system, he was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom in 1980.
Adams was a key advisor in the founding and establishment of the photography department at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, an important landmark in securing photography's institutional legitimacy. He helped to stage that department's first photography exhibition, helped found the photography magazine Aperture, and co-founded the Center for Creative Photography at the University of Arizona.
Group f/64
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Group_f/64
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. In part, they formed in opposition to the pictorialist photographic style that had dominated much of the early 20th century, but moreover, they wanted to promote a new modernist aesthetic that was based on precisely exposed images of natural forms and found objects.[1]
Bo Zarts
(25,783 posts)4. Thanks erronis
Truth to tell, I swing back and forth between a pictorialist photographic style and quasi-zone system style .. sometimes even merging the two (as if that is even possible!). But the major thrust of my photography, whatever the technique, is in service of a burning desire to preserve public lands .. especially the wilderness.
CaliforniaPeggy
(152,727 posts)2. This is a great photo, my dear Bo!
I see the mechanical perfection of the railway tracks and compare that with the living, slightly messy Wildlife Refuge.
The contrast is remarkable to me. It's like night and day up against each other.
Thank you!
Bo Zarts
(25,783 posts)3. Thanks Peggy!