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Bradford Washburn  -  Barnard Glacier, 1958 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Barnard Glacier, 1958

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn  -  Mount McKinley from the Head of Great Gorge, 1955 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Mount McKinley from the Head of Great Gorge, 1955

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn  -  Mount Saint Elias from the North West over Malaspina Glacier, 1958 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Mount Saint Elias from the North West over Malaspina Glacier, 1958

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn  -  Mount Barille, 1977 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Mount Barille, 1977

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn  -  Peter Pass looking South East, 1964 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Peter Pass looking South East, 1964

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn  -  Mount McKinley from North East over Muldrow Glacier, 1938 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Mount McKinley from North East over Muldrow Glacier, 1938

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn  -  Ruth Icefall, 1979 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Ruth Icefall, 1979

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn  -  Mount Saint Elias from North West, 1958 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Mount Saint Elias from North West, 1958

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn  -  Mount Huntington, 1978 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Mount Huntington, 1978

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn  -  Mount McKinley Windstorm, 1942 / Photogravure  -  10.5 x 13.5

Bradford Washburn - Mount McKinley Windstorm, 1942

Photogravure - 10.5 x 13.5

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Bradford Washburn

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Bradford Washburn (1909 – 2007) was an explorer, geographer, mountaineer, cartographer and photographer.

The following text was published in Colin Well’s obituary of Washburn in The Independent in 2007: By the time he reached Harvard, he was already a climbing celebrity, inducted into the prestigious New York Explorer’s Club and a member of the French Alpine Club’s élite Groupe de Haute Montagne to boot, and helping to pay his college fees with the proceeds from lecturing about his adventures. Coming under the influence of Henry Hall, the President of the Harvard Mountaineering Club and an enthusiast for the exploration of the Canadian Rockies, Washburn began a campaign of exploratory mountaineering that would make him the foremost North American alpinist of the mid-20th century. He was especially drawn to the Yukon and Alaska: “I was just fascinated, this was a new place. Very few people had been there.” Starting as a fresh-faced sophomore in 1930 and ending as a grizzled veteran in 1955, Washburn would plan, organise, raise funds and execute numerous expeditions to the far north. They resulted in scores of first ascents of remote mountain giants and new routes including the famous West Buttress Route of North America’s highest peak, Denali/Mount McKinley in 1951. In the mid-1950s, however, Washburn effectively retired from major expeditions to concentrate on his career as the Director of the New England Museum of Natural History. He had been recruited aged 28; the youngest director ever appointed to a major US museum. Over the next 40 years he would transform it from an old-fashioned and ramshackle Victorian collection into the Boston Museum of Science, one of the leading institutions of its kind.

Washburn also greatly advanced the technique of aerial photography and mountain cartography during this period. Initially interested in gaining topographical information in order to help plan his exploratory mountaineering, he pioneered the use of large-format cameras, removing the side door from single-engine aeroplanes and lashing himself to the bulkhead with ropes along with a 50lb Fairchild F6 camera to avoid being sucked into thin air. Washburn’s pictures, however, transcended mere utilitarian purposes. Showing the influence of his friend Ansel Adams, the doyen of American landscape photographers, many of his large-format monochrome prints of mountains, beautifully composed and exposed and packed with spectacular detail, are now regarded as works of art. As with Washburn’s mountaineering, wider public recognition of this aspect of his work came late, with the photographic world becoming fully aware of his legacy in 1990 after Tony Decanaes “discovered” his 15,000-strong collection and began exhibiting Washburn’s pictures. Washburn’s achievements did not stop there, however. In between he managed to advance the cause of mountain cartography significantly, producing exceptionally detailed maps of, amongst other places, Denali, the Grand Canyon and Everest. Aged 89, he helped carry out research into the elevation of Everest that led to a more precise redefinition of its height. At the time of his death, he was working on a map of his retirement community in Lexington, Massachusetts. Despite his extraordinary achievements in mountaineering and photography, Washburn remained most proud of his work in science education. “The top of Mount McKinley was thrilling,” he said, “but there’s nothing on earth more exciting than the eyes of a youngster at the instant of discovery.”

All images: ©Bradford Washburn, courtesy DecaneasArchive.com

The work of Bradford Washburn is featured in these exhibitions.

(Select the image to view the exhibition page)

Contrasts

Contrasts

Messages From The Wilderness, Philip Hyde

Messages From The Wilderness

The work of Bradford Washburn is featured in these Theme Collections.

(Select the image to view the theme page)

Environment - B&W

Environment – B&W

Landscape - B&W

Landscape – B&W

Bradford Washburn - Renaissance Man

Bradford Washburn was truly an American version of a 20th century Renaissance man. Cartographer, scientist, esteemed climber and explorer, museum director, and photographer were some of the pursuits at which he excelled. Among his many activities, Washburn spent 60 years making stunning aerial photographs of frozen vistas, most notably in Alaska.READ ENTIRE ARTICLE

Mount McKinley from North East over Muldrow Glacier, 1938

Mount McKinley from North East over Muldrow Glacier, 1938

“Washburn’s breathtaking photography shows mountains within their dynamic, violent surroundings: wind swirling off peaks, faraway glaciers glinting in the sun. He took many of these photos squeezed into the doorway of a small airplane, his 53-pound Fairchild K-6 camera in tow. Other times, he would pack it with him, his wiry frame trundling up towards the summit,” wrote Ryan Bradley in the National Geographic magazine.
Many photographers have stellar wilderness skills, but Washburn amassed at least 15 first ascents on Alaskan mountains between 1933-1955. An impressed Ansel Adams wrote, “Bradford Washburn is one of the very few people who have combined spectacular experience in the wilderness with equally spectacular achievements in the world of civilization. One never knows what next to expect from this roving genius of mind and mountains…”
Barnard Glacier, 1938

Barnard Glacier, 1938

Three of Washburn’s photogravures from Alaska are included in Ansel Adams: Before and After, an exhibition co-curated by the Booth Western Art Museum and Lumière. This show displays over 25 Adams prints that place the master photographer in the context of photographic history.
Viewers will learn about the pioneers who influenced a young Adams, witness Adams at the pinnacle of his powers, and see Adam’s influence running through the generation of photographers who followed him. The exhibition is now open and has been EXTENDED until April 3, 2016.
Mountaineering captivated Washburn from an early age. By the time he enrolled at Harvard, he had already been inducted into the prestigious New York Explorer’s Club and was a member of the French Alpine Club’s élite Groupe de Haute Montagne. In fact, the young Washburn hoped to pay his college fees through lecturing gigs.
Mount Huntington, 1978

Mount Huntington, 1978

Tireless and fearless, Washburn excelled at all the activities he undertook, but he was proudest of his work as the director of the New England Museum of Natural History. Washburn took what has been described an “uninspired collection” and turned it into a leading science museum now called the Museum of Science, Boston.
Under his leadership, the museum organized the first traveling planetarium in 1948. The 1950s ushered in 20 years of physical expansion, and the museum has not stopped evolving. Washburn was the director from 1939-1980.
Washburn passed away at the age of 96, in 2007 – he is said to have been mapping the grounds of his retirement home when he died – but his legacy lives on at the Bradford Washington American Mountaineering Museum (BWAMM) in Golden, Colorado. His work can also be seen online at his Lumière artist page.

All images: ©Bradford Washburn, courtesy DecaneasArchive.com

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