Robert Adams

Richard Misrach, Desert Fire #249, 1985 © Richard Misrach

b. 1937, Orange, New Jersey
Lives and works in Astoria, Oregon

Fraenkel Gallery

“I think if you placed me almost anywhere and gave me a camera you could return the next day to find me photographing. It helps me, more than anything I know, to find home.”

R. Adams

Robert Adams is a photographer who has documented the extent and the limits of our damage to the American West, recording there, in over fifty books of pictures, both reasons to despair and to hope. “The goal,” he has said, “is to face facts but to find a basis for hope. To try for alchemy.” Adams grew up in New Jersey, Wisconsin, and Colorado, in each place enjoying the out-of-­doors, often in company with his father. At age twenty-five, as a college English teacher with summers off, he learned photography, choosing as his first subjects early prairie churches and early Hispanic art, subjects of unalloyed beauty. After spending time in Scandinavia with his Swedish wife, Kerstin, however, he realized that there were complexities in the American geography that merited exploration.


Overview

Marcello Misrach, Desert Fire #249, 1985 © Richard Misrach

Robert Adams, New housing. North Denver, Colorado, 1973. Gelatin silver print, 8 x 10 inches (sheet) [20.3 x 24.5 cm] © Robert Adams

Camogli Misrach, Desert Fire #249, 1985 © Richard Misrach