Sirius Glass
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Ansel Adams, "El Capitan, Winter"
Yosemite Special Edition Photograph
"El Capitan, Winter" The Story Behind The Image
In Ansel Adams' "El Capitan, Winter," the looming darkness of the granite face contrasts dramatically with the brightness of the snow-clad trees on either side of the Merced River. Ansel Adams made this image before 1950 with an 8" x 10" view camera; the precise date is unknown.
Other photographs of this image have a reversed tonality, dark trees and shadows framing the brighter rock. On winter days, as the sun warms the frozen face of El Capitan, rocks often shower down from above as the ice holding them in place melts. After the thousand-foot fall explodes the rocks on impact filling the valley with booming echoes.
During his career, Ansel took many images of El Capitan's dramatic face, notably one of his first known photographs taken in 1916 on his first trip to Yosemite. Using a Kodak #1 Box Brownie, he offered an early hint at the visualization that would later become his hallmark, framing the pale granite face with leafy trees in the foreground to downplay the overwhelming size of El Capitan. After that early photograph, Ansel Adams returned to El Capitan over and again photographing it in every time, season, and light he could.
Explore more winter photographs made by Ansel Adams. <=== click this link but please feel free to ignore the $ signs.