Robert Frank

Thursday, February 26, 2009


It has been burning goal of ACP to bring Robert Frank to Austin as an Icons of Photography lecturer. Frankly, we don't know if Mr. Frank is interested in giving public presentations these days. Certainly it would be quite a feather in our cap if he accepted an invitation.

Mr. Frank's The Americans is recognized as a watershed moment in the history of photography. Several editions of this marvelous book have been printed since its original (and controversial) first release in 1958. The latest arrived last year from the German publisher Steidl. Mr. Frank himself over saw the printing and even revised the crops on some images making this edition more reflective of his vision of America then any prior publication.

The BBC has published an interesting piece about Mr. Frank and The Americans entitled The Americans in the Frame which explores the development of the book by looking at some of his contact sheets. See the article here.

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'Americans': The Book That Changed Photography

Sunday, February 15, 2009


There are few single works of art that have changed the direction of their medium. In 1959, one book dramatically altered how photographers looked through their viewfinders and the way Americans saw themselves.

Robert Frank's The Americans showed a different America than the wholesome, non confrontational photo essays offered in some popular magazines. Frank's subjects weren't necessarily living the American dream of the 1950s: They were factory workers in Detroit, transvestites in New York, black passengers on a segregated trolley in New Orleans. Frank didn't even get much support from the art world, he recalls.

"The Museum of Modern Art wouldn't even sell the book," Frank says. "But the younger people caught on."

"I'd never seen anything like it," photographer Ed Ruscha says. "Robert Frank came out here and he just showed that you could see the USA until you spit blood."

Joel Meyerowitz, a pioneer of color photography, was also inspired. "It was the vision that emanated from the book that led not only me, but my whole generation of photographers out into the American landscape in a sense — the lunatic sublime of America," he says.

To hear Frank's own words about his photography and read the entire article written by Tom Cole visit NPR.

Also on NPR's website is a review of the book Looking In: Robert Frank's 'The Americans', Expanded Edition.

If you haven't had the opportunity to see a Robert Frank photograph in person, the McNay Art Museum in San Antonio, Texas currently has one image on view as part of the American Concepts and Global Visions/Selections from the AT&T Collection: Masterworks of Photography February 11, 2009 – May 17, 2009.

Image credit: Contact sheet of Robert Frank

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