A Quiet yet Profound Look at the American West
For more than half a century, Robert Adams
has walked, photographed, and lived the American West: from majestic
redwood forests to asphalt rimmed tract homes. “The Place We Live,” a retrospective of Adams’ work organized by the Yale University Art Gallery,
mourns the environmental decline of this majestic frontier while
cherishing unexpected moments of beauty that persist, often within the
frame of a single photograph.
Adams’ photographic pursuits began in 1962, around the time he began
teaching English at Colorado College. Documenting the explosive
development of suburbia in Colorado Springs, Colo., Adams made a
surprising discovery in the darkroom. “I thought I was taking pictures
of things that I hated, but there was something about these pictures. …
They were unexpectedly, disconcertingly glorious.”
The New West,
published in 1974, brought Adams' landscape work to light for the first
time. In the introduction to the original book, John Szarkowski wrote
about the project: “The landscape is, for us, the place we live. If we
have used it badly, we cannot therefore scorn it, without scorning
ourselves. If we have abused it, broken its health, and erected upon it
memorials to our ignorance, it is still our place and before we can
proceed we must learn to love it.”
Along with widespread critical acclaim (as well as receiving many awards and fellowships, most recently from the Hasselblad Foundation),
Adams has been subject to criticism in presenting tragically
overdeveloped landscapes that contradict the sublime idealization of the
formerly Wild West. “Why open our eyes anywhere but in undamaged places
like national parks?” asks Adams. “One reason is, of course, we do not
live in parks, that we need to improve things at home, and that to do it
we have to see the facts without blinking. ... Paradoxically, however,
we also need to see the whole geography, natural and man-made, to
experience a peace; all land, no matter what has happened to it, has
over it a grace, an absolutely persistent beauty.”
“The Place We Live” deliberately invites viewers to question their
beliefs about their surroundings and what obligations result from that
understanding. Joshua Chuang, co-curator of the exhibition and associate
curator of photography and digital media at Yale University Art
Gallery, says that “really ‘getting’ the work requires a modicum of
inner stillness, which is hard to come by in our increasingly frenetic
lives. At first glace, the pictures seem unremarkable since they lack
grandiose scale and drama. But Adams tends to record views that we’d
otherwise dismiss as insignificant or banal, and finds in them a measure
of hard-won beauty that is extraordinary in context. We pay attention
to this balance in his work because it is presented without hyperbole.”
Lisa Larson-Walker is a Slate photo editor.
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