There are a lot of myths accepted as fact in some of the earlier postings. I doubt that these folks [/I]want[/I] to learn the reality but here goes:
1. f'64 and AA did not invent the "Grand American Landscape" nor did they take the iconic images of Yosemite. See Carleton Watkins, Charles Leander Weed, Timothy O'Sullivan, J. J. Reilly, Edward Muybridge and many others from the 1870s and 1880s. As stated in the f/64 manifesto for their 1932 exhibition, they admitted they invented nothing new but were turning to the pre-1900 aesthetic. Shame they didn't do it as well as the originals- hold a mammoth plate by Watkins of Yosemite in your hands and you'll not remember the names of his 50 year later imitator. Look at Watkin's work in In Focus: Carleton Watkins published by the Getty, 1997, and you'll appreciate that Ansel only stole form the best.
Although the case isn't as clear, I believe AA also ripped off the aesthetics and locations of his friend John Paul Edwards, his fellow Pictorialist and later fellow founder of f/64.
2. Besides the Sierra Club, the main reason AA became a household name was the couple of Beaumont & Nancy Newhall. The Newhalls made him famous int he 'high art' world when they were curators at MOMA. Without them showing him there, the Sierra Club would never have heard of him. Additionally, their writing uncritically idolized AA and for decades, the Newhalls were THE photohistorians of America.
3. AA named the Zone System but did not invent it. Like many other aspects, he ripped this off from William Mortenson (see Mortenson on the Negative, 1940 edition, chapter entitled "Origin of the Nine Negatives; Mortenson alas didn't coin a catchy name for a well-known system, he just explained it well.
AA was so petty that he did his best to prevent Mortenson's archive from being placed at the Center For Creative Photography; fortunately he was not successful and the two photographers' work rest there side by side. For an account of how AA tried to destroy all trace of Mortenson long after the latter's death, see A. D. Coleman, William Mortenson, A Revival published by the Center for Creative Photography, page 87.
AA also copied Mortenson's series on photography. Mortenson preceeded him by a decade or more in all cases and Mortenson wrote in a far more lucid style. Additionally, most of Mortenson's volumes went through more editions than any of AA's.
It is a tribute to AA's power (and pettiness) that he was able to almost totally erase any memory of Mortenson, who was far better known before 1950.
Russ