Photographs
Photographs
El Capitan, Winter, Yosemite Valley National Park, California
Lot Closed
October 5, 04:33 PM GMT
Estimate
80,000 - 120,000 USD
Lot Details
Description
Ansel Adams
1902 - 1984
El Capitan, Winter, Yosemite Valley National Park, California
mural-sized gelatin silver print, mounted, framed, typed caption on the photographer's letterhead on the reverse, 1948, printed 1959-60
image: 31⅛ by 19 in. (79.1 by 48.3 cm.)
frame: 40¼ by 26¼ in. (102.9 by 67.3 cm.)
Acquired from the photographer, 1960
By descent through family
Variant:
Ansel Adams, Yosemite Valley (San Francisco, 1959), pl. 9
Ansel Adams, These We Inherit: the Parklands of America (San Francisco: Sierra Club, 1962), pl. 14
Andrea Gray Stillman, ed., Ansel Adams: 400 Photographs (Boston, 2007), p. 299
"I visualized the opalescent glow of the sun on the icy cliff. . .In an overpowering area such as Yosemite Valley it is difficult for anyone to make photographs that do not appear derivative of past work. The subjects are definite and recognizable, and the viewpoints are limited. It is therefore all important to strive for an individual and strong visualization."
(Ansel Adams, quoted in Ansel Adams: 400 Photographs, p. 428)
The photographs in Lots 27 through 31 were acquired by Bill and Winnie Kinard directly from Ansel Adams in late 1959 or early 1960, and they have remained with the Kinard Family for more than six decades. These photographs are accompanied by a copy of the original typed correspondence with Adams on his early '131 24th Avenue · San Francisco 21, California / Telephone Skyline 1 1282' letterhead. When asked recently to reflect on these photographs, the Kinard descendants wrote:
'Our parents, Bill & Winnie Kinard, worked in Yosemite during their college breaks in the late 1930s. It was during these years they met Ansel Adams. Their mutual love of Yosemite found our parents seeing Ansel again at his home in San Francisco in 1959. Ansel invited them in for drinks and he entertained them with his accomplished piano playing. During their visit, Ansel helped our parents select winter images of Yosemite which he felt complemented each other. As a follow-up to this meeting, Ansel sent a typed letter to our Mom in January 1960, sharing his ideas about how the mural-sized prints he personally developed should be framed and displayed. Needless to say, we, as a family, have enjoyed these wonderful prints for over 63 years. We trust anyone who acquires them will cherish them as much as we have.'