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Ansel Adams “In Our Time” a user experience at the MFA

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Entrance to the Adams exhibit

The B&W images that Adams created back many years ago have always generated an emotional response in me. In my college years I started reading about him and looking at his images. His books were then not far behind. I started reading his Camera series with much of it over my head. But, it was Adams after all and there was no better photographer in my mind. His work really started me on my career path.

All that being said, I have probably seen most of Adams’ images either in books, calendars, or exhibit. So the idea of a new exhibit was exciting to me. What more could they do? The last exhibit I attended was the Adams exhibit at the Peabody Essex Museum in Salem. There were only a few of his most famous images plus some very large murals. It was underwhelming. I was disappointed. So this new one was exciting plus it was the MFA in Boston.

I wish I had a photo of it but as we went down stairs to the exhibit the emotions started to come back remembering my close connection to many of his images. The first thing to greet you before you go in is a giant mural of Adams atop his woody in the 40’s planning a shot with his 8×10 view camera. I have seen it before but not this large. My emotional connection came flooding back. There was the tall skinny Adams in his younger years at the height of his image making – wow!

Then my wife and I went into the exhibit and started to see that not only were Adams’ images present but also the works of other photographers (like Muybrige and Watkins) that influenced him. Then also contemporary photographers rounded out the exhibit.

A collection of small Adams prints on display.

The MFA has in it’s collection some 450 prints by Adams which is part of the Lane Collection and these are the images used for this exhibit. They are mixed with works by other photographers both contemporary and before and during Adam’s time. Thus the title Ansel Adams, In Our Time.

Overall the experience is pretty good but the prints from the Lane Collection are not as I expected. Many are old and small and the larger ones seem to be either printed too deep or under lit in the exhibition. Thus a disappointment to me. One of my favorites is Mt. Williamson (a great name) from Manzanar, CA. The print was in pretty good shape and a pleasure to look at.

Mt. Williamson

I wish this image was larger than 11×14 but what can you do. I have seen some of the contemporary work and the pano’s with old images inserted were pretty cool. The large burned forest images were also nice. They went along with Adam’s image of the same.

The work I was most distraught over was that of Catherine Opie. They were two large extremely out of focus images which were done that way on purpose. Thus to show how recognizable certain areas of Yosemite were because of the images Adam’s had made. In my opinion a complete waste of wall space. They even had a video interview with the “artist” sorry, another waste of time. I walked on. Some other large works were double exposures or layered images of recognizable scenes for Yosemite (I think) might have been the Snake River in Wyoming.

Overall the experience was pretty good but not what I expected.

As you walk out you are forced into the gift shop – to be expected I guess. Then you get to see one of my all time favorite images made by Adams is a 20 ft. high mural. Wow it was so cool. I made my own interpretation of it.

Pines in snow

I absolutely love this photograph of his. It was insane to see it the size of an enormous wall. Then we were off to the cafeteria for an expensive lunch. The Adam’s imagery was all around us.

You could not escape it. This image here of the Snake River and the Grand Teton’s is one of my all time fav’s.

Folks enjoying an expensive lunch.

The exhibit goes until Feb. 24, 2019. So go on in and enjoy and make up your own mind as to what you think of it. As a huge Adam’s fan boy I was not overly impressed. The theme was an ok idea but poorly executed. Why they had to go find the weirdest contemporary imagery to go with it is beyond me. The influenced contemporary photographers should have been represented by work that clearly shows Adam’s influence not bizarre imagery. The work of Muybridge and Watkins that influenced Adam’s – great idea!

I think you get the picture – sorry for the pun, couldn’t resist.

 

 

 

The Early Riser

When is the best time to make great images? I get this question repeatedly when showing people around my beautiful island. Well obviously not all locations are lit the best at the same time of day and at the same time of year. Over this past season it was clear that certain places were better lit at different times. All that being said I am a big fan of early morning light. At this time of year especially, because you don’t have to get up at an un-godly hour. If you are up and out by 6 AM you will see dawn, sunrise, and some beautiful light horizontal to the horizon with gorgeous long shadows. Sunset is nice, and at this time of year the sun is lower in the sky all day which gives you more opportunities to shoot. Either way you look at it golden hour is the best. An hour before and after sunrise and an hour before and after sunset will get you some great results. The images will be warmer (color balance) and the lighting will give your images some texture. The difference in color will be before the sun comes up and just after it goes down because the colors are bluer.

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Early morning light in Ipswich. Warm light, long shadows, and texture. Not the best photo composition wise but it has the three elements I like to work with the most.

This image was made in Ipswich while out for a walk while having my car worked on. It has all three of my points for today’s post. Warm light, long shadows, and texture. In my next post I will be talking about composition. Here’s a tease. Most of my images have a central focus. The image above does not. It has some leading lines but but that’s it. So we will get into a discussion of a few things that I look for when composing an image.