Manifest and Sublime at Yancey Richardson takes a long view of the American landscape, showing how photography has shaped the way the country sees itself. On view from July 8 to August 7, 2026, the exhibition brings together work that stretches from 19th-century surveys of Yosemite to contemporary images made in the same terrain, linking early expansionist visions to later, more critical reflections on land, memory and power.
The show places Carleton Watkins and William Henry Jackson at the beginning of that history, when photography helped turn the West into an object of study, wonder and possession. Their mammoth-plate prints present mountains, waterfalls and forests as vast and available, a landscape defined by scale and by the idea of untouched promise. In these pictures, people often appear small, secondary or absent altogether, as if nature itself carried the story.
Ansel Adams pushed that vision toward preservation, using sharp focus and extended tonal range to create images that feel both idealized and urgent. His photographs helped establish the modern environmental image, one that frames wilderness as something worth defending.
Robert Adams later complicated that view, recording the suburban spread and construction across the American West with a tone of clear-eyed loss. His work does not reject beauty, but it insists that beauty and damage now coexist in the same frame.
The more recent photographs in
Manifest and Sublime widen the argument further.
Richard Misrach,
Mitch Epstein, David Hilliard, Sky Hopinka, An-My Lê, Victoria Sambunaris, Terry Evans, Lisa Kereszi and others show landscapes marked by tourism, extraction, history and violence. At the same time, these works hold onto the idea that the land remains a site of awe, connection and even spiritual force. That tension gives the exhibition its shape.
Manifest and Sublime reads as both survey and correction. It shows that the American landscape has never been just scenery. It has been a field of desire, conflict, memory and meaning from the start.
Image:
Terry Evans, Fent's Prairie, near Salina, Kansas, May 28 & 29, 2018.
© Terry Evans. Courtesy of the artist and Yancey Richardson, New York.