I've always been a big fan of Ansel Adams, so we'll probably be checking out the latest exhibit at the Crocker Art Museum...
Yosemite 1938: On the Trail with Ansel Adams and Georgia O'Keeffe February 3 - May 6, 2007
On September 11, 1938, Ansel Adams, Georgia O'Keeffe and their friends David McAlpin and the Godfrey Rockefellers began a 10-day trip through Yosemite. Adams, already well known for his photography of the California wilderness, recorded this trip with his camera, focusing his lens not only on the majesty of the landscape but also on his close friends. When he returned to his studio, he crafted three photographic albums with personal notes and captions, then gave them to his fellow-travelers. Within them were early prints of what became his most famous images, including Glacier Point and Cathedral Peak, as well as more personal portraits and nature studies. Thanks to the McAlpin family's donation of one of these albums to the National Museum of Wildlife Art, these intense and beautiful images can be enjoyed by the Crocker's public as well.