Tuesday, September 4, 2012

ANSEL ADAMS, The Manzanar Project

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ANSEL ADAMS  The Manzanar Project
September 6 - October 27, 2012
 

ANSEL ADAMS, Monument in Cemetery, Mt. Williamson, The Manzanar War Relocation Center, circa 1943

 

The Manzanar Project

Classic Ansel Adams




SCOTT NICHOLS GALLERY is pleased to present ANSEL ADAMS  The Manzanar Project.  The exhibition will be on view Wednesday, September 6 through Saturday, October 27, 2012.

ANSEL ADAMS  The Manzanar Project  will consist of a collection of fifty photographs taken by Ansel Adams during his visits to the Manzanar War Relocation Center, a camp located in Inyo County, California where Japanese American citizens and resident Japanese aliens were interned during World War II.  According to the Library of Congress, in 1942, over 110,000 people of Japanese ancestry, including Japanese immigrants, the American born, and the children of the American born, were singled out and removed from California, southern Arizona, western Washington and Oregon then sent to ten relocation camps.  In 1988, Congress issued an apology on behalf of the nation stating that the internments had been "motivated largely by racial prejudice, wartime hysteria, and a failure of political leadership".

Adams’ photographs were first exhibited in 1944 at the Museum of Modern art in New York in an exhibition titled, MANZANAR: Photographs by Ansel Adams of Loyal Japanese-American Relocation Center.  In the original press release, the curator, Nancy Newhall, expressed the significance of photography in visually communicating problems of prejudice in the postwar world.  She wrote of Adams’ involvement at Manzanar, "A native Californian, Adams undertook this project of his own volition and at his own expense. Believing that in the dangerous struggle for race equality only an impartial and independent statement can be convincing, he has refused to be sponsored or affiliated with any governmental or political groups."

In 1944, U.S. Camera published the photographs and accompanying text in the book, Born Free and Equal.   As explained in his autobiography, Born Free and Equal, Adams’ first photographic essay, was “met with distressing resistance and rejected by many as disloyal” despite its clear message.  Adams’ images of the Manzanar War Relocation Center remain an important marker of a period within our national history and an example of the powerful historical functions of photography itself.

This rare set of photographs was first exhibited by the Fresno Metroplitan Art Museum, Fresno, California in 1985.  ANSEL ADAMS  The Manzanar Project will be the first exhibition of the photographs to be held within a traditional gallery setting.

Also on view in the gallery will be a selection of classic, Ansel Adams photographs.



ANSEL ADAMS, Monument in Cemetery, Mt. Williamson, The Manzanar War Relocation Center, circa 1943

For more information contact SCOTT NICHOLS GALLERY at info@scottnicholsgallery.com or 415-788-4641.


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Copyright © 2012 Scott Nichols Gallery
SCOTT NICHOLS GALLERY
49 Geary Street
Suite 415
San Francisco, CA 94108
(415) 788-4641

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