#HW4 Robert Frank

Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā  Ā Robert Frank and “The Americans”

Robert Frank was an American Swiss photographer, who emigrated to the United States in 1947. Frank at that time had a great conception of the United States and its culture and society but that perception of America quickly changed after taking a close look. What started off as a curiosity of the Americans quickly changed to a feeling of dread. He saw America as a bleak place with an overemphasis on money and lonely people trapped in social circumstances. During his two year travel across America, Frank documented the tension between the optimism of 1950ā€™s and the realities of class and racial differences. Ā He shot 28,000 photos but he only chooses 83 for his book ā€œThe Americans.ā€ America at that time after the World War II, felt great pride, optimism, and empowerment, so when Frankā€™s ā€˜The Americansā€ was published, they felt exposed and their image threatened, thus Frankā€™s photos werenā€™t published in the United States until much later. Ā 

 

Robert Frankā€™s photo book ā€œThe Americansā€ in my opinion was real, personal, and poetic. The images were raw and powerful showing us a side of America in the 1950ā€™s that was dreadful. The racism in that time was evident in his photographs and that to me was a document to how the people were in those times. The images show how an optimistic America, in reality, was a bleak and lonely place, and it seemed people were miserable in their jobs and everyday lives. But I believe Franks intention wasnā€™t to criticize and expose the Americans but merely to observe and report, and he wanted to convey his feeling through his photographs.

The images in the book ā€œThe Americansā€ were honest, artistic, and despondent. Frank through these images introduced an art to photography that wasnā€™t there before, and there is no doubt of his enormous talent.

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One Response to #HW4 Robert Frank

  1. Sandra Cheng says:

    Excellent overview of Frank’s project and I think you are probably right that any criticism was unintentional.

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