Nancy Newhall

Nancy Newhall 1942, photo by Barbara Morgan.

Nancy Wynne Newhall (May 9, 1908 – July 7, 1974) was an American photography critic. She is best known for writing the text to accompany photographs by Ansel Adams and Edward Weston, but was also a widely published writer on photography, conservation, and American culture. [1]

Newhall was born Nancy Wynne in Lynn, Massachusetts, and attended Smith College in that state. She married Beaumont Newhall, the curator of photography at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and substituted for him in that role during his military service in World War II. During the 1940s she wrote essays on popular art and culture for small magazines and journals, in which she called for a society more attuned to art, and particularly to visual art. She was always more interested in a popular audience than an academic one; in a 1940 essay, she explores the possibilities of the new medium of television for popularizing the visual arts, suggesting techniques for teaching art and photography on camera:

. . . the cameras should approach an object as an actual spectator does, and, like him, be influenced by empathy. Long shots become closeups, the flow of compositional directions, and, with due care for the results on the screen, studies of detail and texture under dramatic lighting, are all ways of lending motion to motionless things.[2]

In another, she argues for the centrality of photography for understanding and teaching American history ("Research"). She became close to photographer Edward Weston during this period, championing his early work and regarding his controversial 1940s work, which juxtaposed still lifes and nudes of considerable beauty and delicacy with wartime items such as gas masks, with some anxiety.

In 1945, Newhall wrote the text for a book of photographs, Time in New England, by Paul Strand. The work would begin a new phase for her career, in which she became a vocal proponent and a central pioneer of the genre of oversized photography collections. The best known and most influential of these is This Is the American Earth, a collaboration with Ansel Adams, published in 1960. Like Adams, Newhall was involved with the Sierra Club, and wrote often about issues of conservation. She was sometimes accused of political heavy-handedness on that subject—one uncharitable review of American Earth calls her prose "so full of Message that there is no room for poetry" (Deevey)—but her explication of the political context and motivation of Adams' work has been important for the Sierra Club and the conservation movement in general.

Nancy and Beaumont spent three summers at Black Mountain College beginning in 1946. In addition to lecturing and teaching, the Beaumonts photographed the college campus and its people, taking portraits of Leo Amino, Ilya Bolotowski, Gwendolyn Knight, Jacob Lawrence, and Buckminster Fuller's venetian-blind experiment.[3]

She died on July 7, 1974 at St. Johns Hospital in Jackson Hole, Wyoming from injuries received in an accident which occurred on the Snake River of Grand Teton National Park.[4]

Major books

References

  1. Sternberger, Paul (2003). "Reflections on Edward Weston's Civilian Defense". American Art. 17 (1): 48–67.
  2. Newhall, Nancy (January 1940). "Television and the Arts". Parnassas: 37–38.
  3. Katz, Vincent. Black Mountain College: Experiment in Art. The MIT Press. ISBN 978-0-262-51845-1.
  4. Edkins, Diana E. (1976). "A Tribute to Nancy Newhall". Untitled : Quarterly of the Friends of Photography. 10: 5.

External links

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