Vidéos : Ansel Adams(En savoir plus sur Ansel Adams) |
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Ansel Adams part1Ansel Adams Master Photographers (1983)BBC Series
Ansel AdamsAnsel Adams a film directed by Ric Burns
PBS American Experience Ansel Adams, A Documentary Film 2002 720p HDTV AC3 SoS NEWPBS American Experience - Ansel Adams, A Documentary Film Uploaded HD Version as requested
Roy Firestone interviews Ansel AdamsRoy Firestone interviews Ansel Adams
Ansel Adams: Landscape Photography at its FinestPhotos by Ansel Adams Music: 'Jósep Tekur Fimmuna Í Vinnuna' by Sigur Ros................................................................................. Beautiful all round
Photography Visualization Advice by Ansel AdamsGo to SilberStudios.Tv for more info. Advice on how to visualize your photos, from a rare interview with Ansel Adams. Photo visualization was so important to Ansel Adams that he made it the first chapter of his book on photography.
Ansel Adams's Style, Technique, and PhilosophyA discussion of Ansel's philosophy of photography and the techniques and vision required to express his feelings about his subject matter as well as what was different about Ansel's photographs.
Marc Silber Visits Ansel Adams' Home and DarkroomFor more info: www.silberstudios.tv This is the extended version of my visit to Ansel Adams' home and darkroom. You'll hear his son Michael talk about some of Ansel's most iconic images, including the breakthrough he had when he first visualized the image of Half Dome. This led to the development of his unique and masterful style. You'll also see much more of his darkroom and hear about how Ansel worked and see the darkroom he custom built, like none on earth. Join us now for this rare, behind the scenes look. A special thanks to Rocky Barbanica who originally Produced this (with Robert Scoble manning one of the cameras) when we were putting the show together for FastCompany.
Ansel Adams PrintingAnsel was a master darkroom printer.
Ansel Adams part2Ansel Adams Master Photographers (1983)
Ansel Adams part3Ansel Adams Master Photographers BBC series (1983)
Ansel Adams part4Master Photographers 1983 BBC series
Lobos Creek - The Ansel Adams ConnectionThanks to the folks at Tom's of Maine for supporting this river initiative!------------ This video project is a celebration of the shared legacy between Ansel Adams, the legendary American Artist/Conservationist & Lobos Creek, the last free flowing creek in the whole San Francisco peninsula, which has a source to sea run of just over a mile. I choose to use the the lens of how Lobos Creek shaped Ansel Adams life (art & environmental activism) , as a way of connecting people to the real message of the project: inspiring people to leave their own legacy of activism ; ie. discovering, volunteering, protecting/ rehabilitating, and then ultimately sharing and inviting others to discover the river system for themselves. Simply put - if that discovery or connection is made, then folks can care about the issue and there is hope for restoring & protecting our vital watersheds. ------------------------ While Lobos Creek is somewhat protected by being located in the Presidio National Park, - it's a microcosm of the physical and social features that effect any large water shed around the nation including unspoiled beautiful areas, political ranging over water rights (Lobos Creek happens to be the emergency back up water supply for the entire city) and the urbanization of the stream-bed (ie. it runs alongside a city neighborhood, it has a dam, it crosses under a main road, has a large portion of its flow taken for human consumption and goes into a pipe for 500' of its last leg of the ...
ANSEL ADAMSAnsel Easton Adams (February 20, 1902 - April 22, 1984) was an American photographer, best known for his black and white photographs of California's Yosemite Valley. Adams also authored numerous books about photography, including his trilogy of technical instruction manuals (The Camera, The Negative and The Print); co-founded Group f/64 along with other masters like Edward Weston, Willard Van Dyke, and Imogen Cunningham; and created, with Fred Archer, the zone system. The zone system is a technique which allows photographers to translate the light they see into specific densities on negatives and paper, thus giving them better control over finished photographs. Adams also pioneered the idea of visualization (which he often called 'previsualization', though he later acknowledged that term to be a redundancy) of the finished print based upon the measured light values in the scene being photographed. More information on Ansel Adams and other photographers at The Ansel Adams Gallery: www.anseladams.com
The Ansel Adams Zone System: HDR Capture and Range Compression by Chemical ProcessingGoogle Tech Talk January 21, 2010 ABSTRACT Presented by John McCann. We tend to think of digital imaging and the tools of Photoshop(TM) as a new phenomenon in imaging. We are also familiar with multiple-exposure HDR techniques intended to capture a wider range of scene information, than conventional film photography. We know about tone-scale adjustments to make better pictures. We tend to think of everyday, consumer, silver-halide photography as a fixed window of scene capture with a limited, standard range of response. This description of photography is certainly true, between 1950 and 2000, for instant films and negatives processed at the drugstore. These systems had fixed dynamic range and fixed tone-scale response to light. All pixels in the film have the same response to light, so the same light exposure from different pixels was rendered as the same film density. Ansel Adams, along with Fred Archer, formulated the Zone System, starting in 1940. It was earlier than the trillions of consumer photos in the second half of the 20th century, yet it was much more sophisticated than today's digital techniques. This talk will describe the chemical mechanisms of the zone system in the parlance of digital image processing. It will describe the Zone System's chemical techniques for image synthesis. It also discusses dodging and burning techniques to fit the HDR scene into the LDR print. These techniques introduced spatial changes in the print causing dynamic range compression ...
Ansel Adams' YosemiteA storytelling and visual tour of Yosemite Valley with Ansel Adams' son, Michael.
Ansel Adams photographyBest of Ansel Adams photography
The Story Behind Ansel Adams' Most Iconic Black and White Photograph.Go to SilberStudios.Tv. Join Marc Silber for an inside look at Ansel Adams' home His son Michael gives us a rare inside look at Ansels gallery—where we hear the story behind one of his most iconic shots "Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico" how he captured it with only moments of light to spare. Then see his darkroom with unreleased footage of Ansel at work, you have a view of the man producing his indelible images. Youll come away with a new understanding of this great artists work. Learn more the photography tips from the professionals, then go out and put these tips right to use. For more interviews, tips & secrets, visit us at SilberStudios.tv
Ansel Adams: First Pre-visualizationAnsel reached a critical turning point in his career when he realized that he could pre-visualize how he wanted an photograph to look and then apply his craft to achieve that end.
Ansel Adams: PhotographerAnsel Adams: Photographer
Lost Ansel Adams Photos Worth $200 MillionBestselling apps now free: bit.ly www.mahalo.com Imagine purchasing glass negatives at a garage sale for $45 only discover that they were worth $200 million. It took ten years but that's what happened to Rick Norsigian. CBS News reported on July 27, 2010 that an art appraiser has confirmed the negatives were photographs taken by renowned photographer Ansel Adams. The discovery of 65 glass plates were confirmed to be the work of Adams, feared to have been lost in a darkroom fire in 1937. CNN reported that Norsigian purchased the glass plates at a garage sale in 2000 in southern California for just $45, originally listed at $70. The theory of why they survived is that Adams, who is consider by many to be the "father of American photography", was teaching a photography class in Pasadena in the 1940's and brought them to show his students, which explains why they weren't part of the larger collection lost in that fire. Adams died in 1984. Beverly Hills art appraiser David Streets verified the authenticity of the photographs as belonging to Adams, and stated to CNN, "It truly is a missing link of Ansel Adams and history and his career." Most of the negatives have never been printed, but several closely resembled well-known Adams prints. Streets estimated that the photos could earn as much as $200 million for Norsigian when he sells original prints of the photographs to museums and collectors. For more information about Ansel Adams, and the verification of these recently ...
How Ansel Adams Captured "Moonrise Hernandez"Find out how Ansle Adams captured his classic photography "Moonrise Hernandez" in New Mexico, hear the story from Michael Adams, Ansel's son who was in the car with him. A special thanks to Rocky Barbanica who originally Produced this (with Robert Scoble manning one of the cameras) when we were putting the show together for FastCompany.
Ansel Adams: Early WorksSubmit your Ansel Adams-inspired photographs to be part of a looping slideshow at the San Jose Museum of Art by going to www.flickr.com/groups/ansel. Experience how artists have been influenced by the natural world and use your ability to capture, in your own unique way, the essence of natural beauty. Ansel Adams: Early Works is on view September 5, 2009 February 28, 2010 at the San Jose Museum of Art. Ansel Adams photographer, musician, naturalist, explorer, critic and teacher was a giant in the field of landscape photography and a native Californian. This exhibition focuses on the masterful, small-scale prints made by Adams from the 1920s to the 1950s. During this time, Adamss printing style evolved from his soft-focus, warm-toned, painterly Parmelian prints of the 1920s; through the sharp-focused photography of the f/64 school that he co-founded with Edward Weston and Imogen Cunningham in the 1930s; to the cooler, higher-contrast approach he embraced thereafter.
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