From film to flash cards, photography and technology have always been intimately related. The greatest photographers were also master technicians in the darkroom, and none more so than Ansel Adams.
Adams, who died in 1984, pushed the bounds of photography as far as mid-20th century technology could go. But Karen Haas, curator of a new Ansel Adams exhibit at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts, says that had Adams lived to see the digital age, he would have been a master of the mega-pixel.
Guests:
Karen Haas, curator of a new Ansel Adams exhibit at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts











