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May
19 – August 26, 2007
Yosemite: Art
of an American Icon
Great Hall Low Bay
Presented by the Art Department
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| Roger
Minick (b. 1944), Yosemite National Park, 1980.
Dye coupler print, 16”x20.” Oakland Museum of
California Prints and Photographs Fund. |
The sheer majesty of Yosemite has inspired painters
and photographers for ages. The power of art to shape how the national
park has been viewed, used, and protected is vividly captured in YOSEMITE:
ART OF AN AMERICAN ICON, at the Oakland Museum of
California May 19–August 26, 2007.
Organized by the Museum of the American West, Autry
National Center, in Los Angeles, the exhibition looks at Yosemite’s
changing visual identity and cultural role as a national and international
destination, and the response by artists to its transition from
an ideal of wilderness to a commercial and often congested venue.
The comprehensive exhibition spans artwork—more
than 150 paintings, baskets, and photographs—from the mid-nineteenth
century to the present, Arranged in four chronological sections, Yosemite:
Art of an American Icon examines Yosemite’s ongoing
relevance as a contemporary Western landscape and natural wonder.
I. 1855–1890: Nature’s Cathedral
Propelled by a spirit of discovery, America’s long search for cultural
prowess refocused on the West. Urged by writers, critics, and intellectuals
to become directly involved with nature, artists sought out Yosemite, portraying
it as a bastion of pristine wilderness and evidence of America’s divine
providence.
This section includes a selection of early baskets,
mammoth-plate photographs by Carleton Watkins and Eadweard
J. Muybridge, and grand landscape paintings by Albert
Bierstadt, William Keith, and Thomas
Hill. These artworks document the presence of Miwok and
Paiute native peoples in Yosemite as central to its early identity
as an exotic and distinctly Western destination.
II. 1890–1916: The People’s
Playground
As the 1890 census declared the close of the American frontier, Yosemite achieved
national park status and made its official transition from remote locale to
popular resort. With the opening of the Yosemite Valley Railroad in 1905, the
park became widely accessible.
This area, with photos by Isaiah Taber and George
Fiske showing visitors frolicking on overhanging rocks, explores the
impact of tourism and changing ideas regarding conservation. By the late nineteenth
century native baskets has been transformed from a utilitarian tool to a fashionable
collectible. In 1916 the newly established National Park Service instituted
Indian Field Days, an annual fair/rodeo/marketplace, which continued until
1929.
The failed efforts of William Keith and John Muir
to save the Hetch-Hetchy Valley from becoming a reservoir for San
Francisco’s water needs signaled the end of Yosemite as a
scenic preserve and its future as a tourist mecca. The resulting
dam is still under debate.
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| Eadweard
J. Muybridge, Yosemite Creek: Summit of Falls at Low
Water, 1872, mammoth-plate albumen print. Courtesy California
State Library, Sacramento |
III. 1917–1969: An Icon Comes of Age
Thanks to America’s newfound love of the auto, Yosemite visitation doubled
between 1915 and 1919. Its patrons became intent on development and anticipating
the needs of the masses. From impressionists Maurice Braun and Colin
Campbell Cooper to the pictorialists Alvin Langdon Coburn, William
Dassonville, and Anne Brigman, Yosemite artists shaped
a fresh identity for the park as an aesthetically stylish venue. Chiura
Obata first visited the park in 1927, when he created more than 100
watercolors and sketches, some later turned into woodblock prints.
Ansel Adams created the iconic images that soon dominated
the public’s imagination. As Yosemite’s audience widened,
the relationship between the park and its artists also became a more
intimate one, as modernists from Edward Weston to Charles
Sheeler explored its abstract potential.
IV. 1970–Present: Revisiting Yosemite
Yosemite faces overcrowding and unrest. Focusing on a landscape long removed
from its frontier roots, artists now deal with a place of contradictions,
where urban development abuts raw nature. Photographers Roger Minick,
Ted Orland, Thomas Struth, John Divola, and Richard Misrach have
looked past the romantic legacy of Adams. Major artists Wayne Thiebaud and David
Hockney have also cast Yosemite in a modern light.
Beginning in the 1980s, painting returned with vigor. The diverse approaches
from Greg Kondos, Wolf Kahn, Jane Culp, and Tony Foster close
the exhibition on an optimistic note, looking to the future of the park through
the eyes of its artists past and present.
Public Programs
The museum has organized five public programs—interpretative talks and
tours, slide shows, and storytelling by Yosemite park rangers. Three programs
are part of First Fridays After Five, when the museum stays open until 9 p.m.
for live music, food and drink, and activities.For a PDF
of the upcoming programs.
Yosemite:
Art of an American Icon was
organized by the
Museum of the American West, Autry National Center, Los Angeles, California.
Creation of this exhibition is made possible in part by the generosity
of:
Local
presentation of this exhibition is funded by Oakland Museum Women’s
Board, The Bernard Osher Foundation, AAA, The Mechanics Bank,
and Ansel Adams Gallery.
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