• Recto of print
  • Recto of print with original mount
  • Verso of original mount
  • Photomicrograph showing print surface (scale bar is in micrometers)
  • Photomicrograph showing print surface (scale bar is in micrometers)

Ansel Adams (American, 1902–1984)

Architecture, Early California Cemetery, 1932/36, printed 1936

Gelatin silver print; 14.7 x 18.1 cm (image/paper/first mount/second mount); 27.9 x 35.6 cm (third mount)
Alfred Stieglitz Collection, 1949.662
© The Ansel Adams Publishing Rights Trust

 

Ansel Adams considered the prints he prepared for his 1936 one-man exhibition at Stieglitz’s gallery An American Place—including Architecture, Early California Cemetery—among the finest he ever made.[1] In the exhibition pamphlet he described the photographs, which he printed on glossy gelatin silver paper, as “individual experiences integrated in black and white through the simple medium of the camera.”[2] This work shows the entrance to a mausoleum in Laurel Hill Cemetery, San Francisco, and its matter-of-fact view was typical of the straight photography practiced by Group f/64, which Adams had cofounded. By reducing the image’s perspective and depth he encouraged the viewer to focus on the effects of sunlight across the planes of the building’s architecture as captured by the tonal range of a black-and-white photograph.

 

Additional resources related to this object are to the right. Comprehensive material analysis can be found in the Object Research PDF.

 

[1] Andrea Gray, Ansel Adams: An American Place, 1936 (Little, Brown, 1982), p. 22.

[2] Ansel Adams, Ansel Adams: Exhibition of Photographs, exh. brochure (An American Place, 1936), n.p.