The US National Park Service turns 100, Aug. 25. In commemorating the milestone, one of the oldest and most important museums of photography is hosting a stunning show in its honor.
The theme for the show dubbed “Photography and America’s National Parks” is open through October at the George Eastman Museum in Rochester, New York. The show honors the United States’ vast collection of public lands and monuments, from Yellowstone and Yosemite to the Lincoln Memorial, and even New York’s Stonewall Inn. As, curator Jamie M. Allen described it, “this exhibition . . . illuminates the history of the most significant national parks through lush landscape photographs.”
The exhibition takes a wide look at the park's history, including classic images like an Ansel Adams vista alongside more humorous images, like a Willie Osterman photo of a motorized tram packed with camera-clad tourists rolling up a hill. Images like these showcase the evolution of the parks from the unknown frontiers of the country to the sought after landmarks they are today. But above all the selection is designed to inspire people to look at national landscape just as Teddy Roosevelt once did, a century ago: “It was like lying in a great solemn cathedral, far vaster and more beautiful than any built by the hand of man.”
source://qz.com
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