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
Ansel Easton Adams (February 20, 1902 – April 22, 1984) was an American landscape photographer and environmentalist known for his black-and-white images of the American West. He helped found Group f/64, an association of photographers advoca ...
and
Edward Weston, but was also a widely published writer on photography,
conservation, and
American culture.
Biography
Newhall was born Nancy Wynne in
Lynn, Massachusetts, and attended
Smith College
Smith College is a Private university, private Liberal arts colleges in the United States, liberal arts Women's colleges in the United States, women's college in Northampton, Massachusetts. It was chartered in 1871 by Sophia Smith (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. Newhall 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.
In another, she argues for the centrality of photography for understanding and teaching American history ("Research"). Newhall became close to photographer
Edward Weston during this period, championing his early work and regarding his controversial 1940s work, which juxtaposed
still life
A still life (plural: still lifes) is a work of art depicting mostly wikt:inanimate, inanimate subject matter, typically commonplace objects which are either natural (food, flowers, dead animals, plants, rocks, shells, etc.) or artificiality, m ...
s 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
Paul Strand (October 16, 1890 – March 31, 1976) was an American photographer and filmmaker who, along with fellow modernist photographers like Alfred Stieglitz and Edward Weston, helped establish photography as an art form in the 20th century ...
. 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
Ansel Easton Adams (February 20, 1902 – April 22, 1984) was an American landscape photographer and environmentalist known for his black-and-white images of the American West. He helped found Group f/64, an association of photographers advoca ...
, published in 1960. Like Adams, Newhall was involved with the
Sierra Club
The Sierra Club is an environmental organization with chapters in all 50 United States, Washington D.C., and Puerto Rico. The club was founded on May 28, 1892, in San Francisco, California, by Scottish-American preservationist John Muir, who be ...
, and wrote often about issues of
conservation. Newhall 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 Newhalls photographed the college campus and its people, taking portraits of
Leo Amino,
Ilya Bolotowsky,
Gwendolyn Knight,
Jacob Lawrence, and
Buckminster Fuller's venetian-blind experiment. Some of Nancy and Beaumont Newhall's work is archived at the
Center for Creative Photography
The Center for Creative Photography (CCP), established in 1975 and located on the University of Arizona's Tucson campus, is a research facility and archival repository containing the full archives of over sixty of the most famous American pho ...
at the
University of Arizona in
Tucson, Arizona and at the
Getty Research Institute in
Los Angeles, California. Nancy Newhall's photography has been the subject of an exhibition in its own right.
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.
Major books
*''Photographs, 1915-1945: Paul Strand''. New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1945.
*''The Photographs of Edward Weston''. Edward Weston and Nancy Newhall, Museum of Modern Art, NY 1946.
*''Time in New England: Photographs by Paul Strand.'' New York: Aperture, 1950. Reprinted New York: Harper and Row, 1980.
*''A Contribution to the Heritage of Every American: The Conservation Activities of John D. Rockefeller, Jr.'' New York: Knopf, 1957.
*(with Beaumont Newhall) ''Masters of Photography.'' New York: Braziller, 1958.
*(with Ansel Adams)''This Is the American Earth''. San Francisco:
Sierra Club Books
Sierra Club Books was the publishing division, for both adults and children, of the Sierra Club, founded in by then club President David Brower. They were a United States publishing company located in San Francisco, California with a concentrat ...
, 1960.
*''Words of the Earth'', photographs by
Cedric Wright. Sierra Club Books, 1960
*''Alvin Langdon Coburn: A Portfolio of Sixteen Photographs.'' Rochester: George Eastman House, 1963.
*''Edward Weston, Photographer: The Flame of Recognition: His Photographs, Accompanied by Excerpts from the Daybooks & Letters,'' Edward Weston and Nancy Newhall, Published by Aperture, Inc. NY, 1968.
*''The Daybooks of Edward Weston,'' by Edward Weston, edited by Nancy Newhall, v. 1. Mexico.--v. 2. California, Millerton, N.Y., Aperture, 1973.
*''Ansel Adams.'' Sierra Club, 1964. Reprinted (with photographs) as ''Ansel Adams: The Eloquent Light.'' New York: Aperture, 1980.
*(with Beaumont Newhall) ''T. H. O’Sullivan: Photographer.'' Eastman, 1966.
*(with Ansel Adams)''Fiat Lux: The University of California.'' New York: McGraw Hill, 1967.
*''P. H. Emerson: The Fight for Photography as a Fine Art.'' Aperture, 1975.
References
Sources
*Deevey, Edward S. Review of ''This is the American Earth.'' ''Science,'' Vol. 132, No. 3441 (1960), 1759.
*
*Klochko, Deborah, Merry Foresta, MaLin Wilson, et al. ''Nancy Newhall: A Literacy of Images'', San Diego, Calif.: Museum of Photographic Arts, 2008.
*Newhall, Nancy. "The Need for Research in Photography." ''College Art Journal,'' Vol. 4, No. 4 (1945), 203-206.
*—. "Television and the Arts." ''Parnassus,'' Vol. 12, No. 1 (1940), 37-38.
*Sternberger, Paul. "Reflections on Edward Weston's 'Civilian Defense.'" ''American Art,'' Vol. 17, No. 1 (2003), 48-67.
External links
''Nancy Newhall, Tioga Mine, California'' photo by Ansel Adams*
Finding Aid for Beaumont and Nancy Newhall papers, 1843-1993 at the Getty Research InstituteFinding aid for the Beaumont and Nancy Newhall collection, 1930 - 1983 at the Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ.
{{DEFAULTSORT:Newhall, Nancy
1908 births
1974 deaths
American art critics
American women journalists
Photography critics
Women science writers
American women critics
Sierra Club people
Smith College alumni
20th-century American non-fiction writers
20th-century American women writers
American nature writers
Historians of photography