Robert Frank Swiss - American, 1924-2019
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Paper: 27.9 x 35.6 cm / 11 x 14 in
Frame: 38.1 x 48.3 cm / 15 x 19 in
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Robert Frank’s untitled gelatin silver print, made in 1955–56, brings together the immediacy of observation and the emotional tension that define his early American work.
At first glance, the image seems to capture an ordinary moment in a diner or lunch counter: a suited man seated at a table, a magazine in his hands, a glass, napkins, and the stark fluorescent lights stretching overhead. Yet Frank transforms this familiar setting into something far more charged, using a low viewpoint, tight cropping, and a deliberately unstable composition to create a picture that feels both intimate and disquieting.
What gives the photograph its force is the way it moves beyond simple description. The scene is recognizable, rooted in the visual language of mid-century America, with its signs of consumption, public life, and everyday routine. But Frank leaves the image open and unresolved, allowing gesture, posture, and atmosphere to suggest a deeper sense of isolation and unease. The bowed head, the grip of the hand, and the hard brightness of the artificial light all contribute to a mood of estrangement that became central to his vision of postwar America.
As in his finest photographs, Frank does not dramatize the scene through spectacle. Instead, he reveals how the ordinary can hold something fragile, tense, and psychologically complex.
Modest in scale but rich in presence, the print carries both the intimacy of a closely held photograph and the enduring significance of an artist who changed the course of documentary photography by showing that the everyday could also be profoundly unsettling.
The label on the reverse identifies the work as a gelatin silver print by Robert Frank and records its inclusion in Storylines at Tate Modern between 28 October 2004 and 23 January 2005, adding an important exhibition history to the object itself.
Provenance
Robert Frank FoundationExhibitions
Robert Frank: StorylinesTate Modern, 28 October 2004 - 23 January 2005