Completely harmonious surface, no bubbles or impurities with a matte finish to prevents distracting reflections.
Added to your wishlist
Adding to your wishlist in progress
Framed artwork added to your wishlist
Share this work
Share with your printing options
Link to be shared
Add to my wishlist
Additional products
Canvas Print
starting at 41 €
Fine Art Print
starting at 19 €
Fine Art Print Standard frame sizes
starting at 21 €
Mounting on aluminium
starting at 31 €
More works by Ansel Adams
Moonrise over Hernandez New Me...
26 x 22.7 cm
starting at 90 €
Jeffrey Pine, Sentinel Dome 19...
26.8 x 22.8 cm
starting at 92 €
Winter Sunrise from Lone Pine,...
27 x 22.7 cm
starting at 92 €
El Capitan, Winter Yosemite Na...
22.8 x 26.7 cm
starting at 92 €
Church and Road, Bodega, Calif...
22.8 x 27.9 cm
starting at 93 €
Yosemite national park, Calif...
22.8 x 26.6 cm
starting at 92 €
Moonrise from Glacier Point, Y...
26.5 x 22.7 cm
starting at 92 €
About Ansel Adams
American photographer, born in San Francisco, Ansel Adams is one of the pioneers of photography.
He made his first photographs in 1916 in Yosemite National Park, California. From the beginning, he showed a passion for America's magnificent landscapes. Intended to become a pianist, his meeting with Paul Strand in 1930 would leave an indelible mark on him, confirming his vision of a photography that was pure and devoid of artifice.
In 1932, Ansel Adams founded the now famous "f/64" group with exceptional photographers such as Edward Weston, John Paul Edwards and Williard van Dyke. Their line of conduct: close the diaphragm to its maximum - that of the photographic cameras of the time - and capture the landscapes with the greatest precision and the smallest details, thanks to a depth of field extending from the foreground to infinity. See more
Ansel Adams will devote a large part of his life - and work - to American national parks. Through the purity of his images, he will contribute to their preservation and arouse the general public's enthusiasm for nature, even encouraging the creation of new protected areas. All the photographs of Ansel Adams National Parks together make up 24 albums.