Robert Frank Swiss - American, 1924-2019
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Paper: 27.9 x 35.6 cm / 11 x 14 in
Frame: 37.8 x 48.3 cm / 14 7/8 x 19 in
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Robert Frank’s “Chicago, 1955”distills an entire urban psychology into a scene of striking economy: a solitary figure in a light hat, turned away from us, passes beneath a stark message about luck, risk, and what one can afford to lose.
The composition is spare, yet intensely charged; the dark wall, the cropped body, and the suspended text create a quiet drama in which anonymity, chance, and vulnerability seem to meet.
Frank transforms an ordinary encounter into something deeply existential, suggesting a city where public signs read like private destinies. Nothing here is theatrical, yet everything feels precise and alive, held in that unmistakable tension between observation and emotion.
In this print, Chicago becomes more than a place: it becomes a state of mind, poised between movement and stillness, irony and tenderness, distance and human presence.
Provenance
Robert Frank FoundationExhibitions
Robert Frank: StorylinesTate Modern, 28 October 2004 - 23 January 2005