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Robert Frank's America
The most influential living photographer is the subject of a major new exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. VIEW OUR GALLERY of his greatest work.
In 1959, the Swiss-born Robert Frank published a modest book of black and white photographs. His pictures were made during several road trips across America in the 1950s and show common people in ordinary situations. They were dismissed at the time, not only for their “muddy exposures, drunken horizons, and general sloppiness,” but because they were perceived as a bitter indictment of American society.
Still, his fellow photographers recognized the tenor of their moment reflected in his work, and the book, The Americans, has long since come to be regarded as a 20th-century masterpiece.
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Now Frank, arguably the most influential living photographer, is about to mark another defining cultural moment. Next week, the exhibition, Looking In: Robert Frank’s ‘The Americans, opens at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. That august institution has never before given such comprehensive focus to a single body of work by an individual photographer—nor has it bestowed such a crowning acknowledgment of photographic achievement.
All 83 pictures from The Americans will be exhibited together for the first time in New York. Additionally, the show, organized by Sarah Greenough, a senior curator at the National Gallery in Washington, D.C., where it originated last January, includes vintage contact sheets from which the pictures were selected (out of 767 rolls of film); a wall of the original work prints from which Frank selected the final images for the book; a map that charts his cross-country trips; correspondence that includes letters to Walker Evans; and Jack Kerouac’s original typescript for the book’s introduction. As exhibitions go, this one strikes a remarkable balance of incisive, exhaustive scholarship and rich visceral satisfaction.
The show features a map that charts his cross-country trips; correspondence that includes letters to Walker Evans; and Jack Kerouac’s original typescript for the book’s introduction.
Until Robert Frank came along, objectivity was a hallmark of the documentary photograph, typified by the compositional tidiness, visual clarity, and emotional distance found in the work of Walker Evans. Not only did Frank’s photographs liberate the picture frame from those conventions, his work has come to underscore the idea that what passes for photographic objectivity may be only a matter of style. Frank set out to document America, but he made a visual chronicle of his own experience at the same time.
Abstract Expressionism defined the artistic climate in which the photographs for The Americans were produced. Frank, who lived in downtown Manhattan from the time he arrived in the United States in 1947, counted among his good friends Willem de Kooning, Franz Kline, and Allen Ginsberg. They set a precedent for Beat generation artists and writers, whose improvisational art-making practices aimed for the spontaneous act of expression to be a vital component of their work. Frank’s pictures reflect the stream of consciousness art making of the period as he attempted to capture the authenticity of his own experience in visual terms.
Frank might well be called the father of “the snapshot aesthetic,” a term coined a decade after The Americans was published to identify an emergent photographic style that combined the un-self-conscious informality of family snapshots, the authenticity of documentary photography, and the increasingly active style of news pictures. “Innocence is the quintessence of the snapshot,” Lisette Model would write. “I wish to distinguish between innocence and ignorance. Innocence is one of the highest forms of being and ignorance one of the lowest.”







whipmawhopma
I think it's easy to find meaning or to import meaning to B&W photographs of real and ordinary people. One wonders what the people in these photographs are thinking, what they are doing, and we project our own thoughts and actions into them.
I don't think this works with color photography so much. B&W seems to impart a sense of history, while color seems to impart a sense of spectacle, making the view more passive.
Of course, I am project my own sense of things. For someone else a color photograph might have more meaning than a B&W one.
sdbkny
robert frank is not the most influential living photographer. far from it. roy decarava has been taking and creating photographs for 70 years. he's the photographer other photographers reference endlessly, but never acknowledge. and is still alive and kicking, teaching advanced photography at hunter college in nyc. i know, i took a class. and it was awesome. please, do your homework.
sekaer
I'm sorry, I signed up in order to respond to your comment, which is absolutely NOT TRUE. Since Cartier-Bresson died, Frank is undoubtedly the most influential living photographer...please don't confuse others with your personal opinion as if it were fact. Have a look at the book Photography after Frank if you need proof and let me know when Photography After De Carava comes out....
clearthinker
B&W photographs give a better feeling of depth than that of color. For instance, in the New Mexico photo, you can see the rock in the asphalt and the clarity of land and sky. This is beautiful, beautiful stuff.
guiltybystander
beautiful stuff- Frank is great
Thank you.
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