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Created with high-quality printing techniques for a vivid and sharp image, this versatile art print strikes a balance between quality and affordability.
Created with high-quality printing techniques for a vivid and sharp image, this versatile art print strikes a balance between quality and affordability.
In 1941, a young Ansel Adams was hired by the United States government to photograph the country’s national parks. The breathtaking images taken by Adams illustrate both his early technical achievements with photography and earns his place among the world’s most renowned landscape photographers. Adams was instrumental in raising photography’s status to that of fine art, even helping to establish a permanent photography department at the New York Metropolitan Museum. As a diligent activist, he played a seminal role in the dawning of the environmental consciousness through his work on the Board of Directors of the Sierra Club.
Read MoreAnsel Adams’ magically-lit picture of majestic redwoods and tender saplings in “Redwoods, Founder Grove,” embodies the natural life cycle that he sought to preserve. An avid wildlife conservationist, Adams (1902 – 1984) used his highly nuanced black and white photos to advocate environmentalism. With his command of composition and detail, Adams transformed photography into a respected fine art, helping to found the department of photography at the New York Museum of Modern Art.
Created with high-quality printing techniques for a vivid and sharp image, this versatile art print strikes a balance between quality and affordability.
In 1941, a young Ansel Adams was hired by the United States government to photograph the country’s national parks. The breathtaking images taken by Adams illustrate both his early technical achievements with photography and earns his place among the world’s most renowned landscape photographers. Adams was instrumental in raising photography’s status to that of fine art, even helping to establish a permanent photography department at the New York Metropolitan Museum. As a diligent activist, he played a seminal role in the dawning of the environmental consciousness through his work on the Board of Directors of the Sierra Club.
Read MoreAnsel Adams’ magically-lit picture of majestic redwoods and tender saplings in “Redwoods, Founder Grove,” embodies the natural life cycle that he sought to preserve. An avid wildlife conservationist, Adams (1902 – 1984) used his highly nuanced black and white photos to advocate environmentalism. With his command of composition and detail, Adams transformed photography into a respected fine art, helping to found the department of photography at the New York Museum of Modern Art.