ANSEL ADAMS (1902–1984)
ANSEL ADAMS (1902–1984)
ANSEL ADAMS (1902–1984)
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ANSEL ADAMS (1902–1984)

Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, 1941

Details
ANSEL ADAMS (1902–1984)
Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, 1941
gelatin silver mural print, flush-mounted on board, printed by 1967
annotated 'George Eastman House' by an unknown hand in pencil (flush mount, verso)
image/sheet/flush mount: 28 3⁄8 x 38 1⁄8 in. (72.1 x 96.8 cm.)
Provenance
Gifted by the artist to Ted Orland and Linda Dunne;
Andrew Smith Gallery, 1980s;
Private Collection, New York, 1989;
acquired from the above by the present owner.
Literature
Ansel Adams, Photographs of the Southwest, New York Graphic Society, Boston, 1966, pl. 55.
Ansel Adams, Examples: The Making of 40 Photographs, Little, Brown and Co., New York, 1989, cover, p. 40.
John Szarkowski, Ansel Adams at 100, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art/Little, Brown and Co., Boston, 2001, pl. 96.
Karen E. Haas and Rebecca A. Senf, Ansel Adams in the Lane Collection, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2005, pl. 37, p. 68.
Andrea G. Stillman (ed.), Ansel Adams: 400 Photographs, Little, Brown and Co., New York, 2007, p. 175.
Exhibited
Rochester, George Eastman Museum, Eloquent Light: Photographs by Ansel Adams, March 17 - May 14, 1967.

Brought to you by

Peter Klarnet
Peter Klarnet Senior Specialist, Americana

Lot Essay

One of the greatest pieces of American art from the 20th century, Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, 1941, encompasses the grandeur, history, and promise-laden atmosphere of the American West. Laid under an expansive sky, the quickly fading afternoon sunlight falls onto the white pockets of snow on the peaks of the Sangre de Cristo mountains in the distance, gleaming off the wooden crosses next to the church, all enveloped within the vastness of the American landscape.

Arguably Adams' most celebrated image, the present lot is an impressive, mural-size print, rare in this size and highlighting his technical skill as a master printer. Displaying a nuanced range of grey tonality in the clouds and the foreground brush while maintaining the overall striking contrast, this print is a culmination of Adams' perfected vision for the scene, forged by re-fixing the original negative and his precision in the darkroom on the print itself. This print was gifted by Adams to his assistant, Ted Orland, in the early 1970s, and later acquired by a private collection, where it has remained for the last forty years.

In 1963, Adams' first Eloquent Light exhibition was held at San Francisco's DeYoung Museum and was the largest solo exhibition for a photographer at the time. Curated by Nancy Newhall, the author of his biography of the same name, the retrospective highlighted Adams' achievements as a master craftsman over the first forty years of his career. The present lot was exhibited in a subsequent Eloquent Light exhibition at Rochester's George Eastman House in 1967, underscoring the importance of his technical and artistic innovations in American photography.

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