In 1932, eleven Bay Area photographers — among them Imogen Cunningham, Edward Weston, and Ansel Adams — changed the history of photography. Under the moniker ‘Group f.64’ (named for the smallest ...
Short-lived but, to this day, popular and admired, Group f.64 revolutionized photography in the 1930s with its small-aperture method, unadulterated images and sharp-focus style. An exhibition at Scott ...
In this lively group biography about the California photographers known as Group f.64, Alinder (Ansel Adams: A Biography) tells a distinctly West Coast story about an ambitious, broad-minded, and ...
The amazing array of Group f/64-influenced photos in this exhibit is a treasure. In contrast to the soft Pictorialists, these images pop with contrast, with detail, with form and graphic impact. If ...
GREENWICH — Children were invited to the Bruce Museum on Saturday and Sunday for a drop-in art activity. The children made black-and-white art inspired by the Photographic Revolutionaries of Group ...
at the Northwest Museum of Arts & Culture, but you only have one chance to listen to Mary Street Alinder talk about the show and the photographers. I'd recommend you do just that. f/64 was an informal ...
The year is 1932, and photography is having an identity crisis. While it’s now easily considered a fine art, back then it was still fighting for its rightful place. Enter Group f.64, a cabal of 11 ...
October 1932; Edward Weston; Sonya Noskowiak; Willard Van Dyke; Imogen Cunningham; Ansel Adams -- The party -- Group f.64 -- The exhibition -- Unsung heroes -- A major loss -- The way of Stieglitz -- ...
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