A Grand Vision: The David H. Arrington Collection of Ansel Adams Photographs

A Grand Vision: The David H. Arrington Collection of Ansel Adams Photographs

View full screen - View 1 of Lot 85. Whaler’s Cove, Carmel Mission, California.

Ansel Adams

Whaler’s Cove, Carmel Mission, California

Auction Closed

February 17, 07:14 PM GMT

Estimate

40,000 - 60,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Ansel Adams

1902 - 1984

Whaler’s Cove, Carmel Mission, California


mural-sized sepia-toned gelatin silver print, mounted to Homasote board, framed, circa 1950, printed circa 1955

image: 94½ by 118¼ in. (240 by 300.4 cm.)

frame: 96½ by 120¼ in. (245.1 by 305.4 cm.)

Richard Lorenz, Oakland

Bonhams New York, 28 October 2008, Sale 16121, Lot 22, Andrew Smith Gallery, Santa Fe, as agent

Salem, Peabody Essex Museum, Ansel Adams: At the Water’s Edge, June – October 2012

Greenwich, The Royal Museums Greenwich, Photography From the Mountains to the Sea, November 2012  – April 2013, and traveling thereafter to:

Sydney, Australian National Maritime Museum, July – December 2013

Adams' first foray into making mural-sized photographs came in 1935, when he was asked by his employer at the time, the Yosemite Park & Curry Company, to undertake a series of murals of Yosemite for the San Diego Exposition of that year. He became an articulate spokesman for the form, writing articles such as 'Photo-Murals' for U. S. Camera in November 1940, and discussing mural theory and practice in books such as his own The Print: Contact Printing and Enlarging of 1968. 'I was fascinated with the challenge of making a photographic print in grand scale,' Adams wrote in his autobiography. 'Many of my large-format Yosemite negatives took on a new resonance in mural-sized proportions' (Ansel Adams: An Autobiography, p. 187).


The present mural-sized print was one of a series executed in the early 1950s. These murals were printed in sections, by the Moulin Studios or General Graphics in San Francisco. The sections were so large that they were developed in mammoth trays, then mounted with wheat paste to Homasote board.