Robert Adams | The Place We Live | Yale University Art Gallery - Chronology (1967)
Yale University Art Gallery
Robert Adams: The Place We Live

Begins teaching part-time in order to photograph more.

His pictures are often rejected for publication and exhibition, and are, to his discouragement, returned destroyed as well.

Travels in the summer to Germany and Scandinavia with his parents and Kerstin, finding especially memorable the new churches in and near Cologne by Rudolf Schwarz and the Woodland Cemetery in Stockholm by Erik Gunnar Asplund. Spends two weeks on the ancestral farmstead of Kerstin’s family.

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In the fall, turns to photographing the new suburban landscape along Colorado’s Front Range.

“A suggestion I’d read by Dorothea Lange was uppermost in my mind. She had called for the building of a file about ‘the life of the American people in the 1960s, with particular emphasis on urban and suburban life.’ It should, she said, ‘be concentrated on what exists and prevails.’”
—From a lecture given at the International Center of Photography, New York, 1977