- Drugstore, Detroit
- from the series The Americans
Sheet: 13 7/8 × 11 in. (35.3 × 27.9 cm)
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Widely regarded as one of the
most influential photographers of all time, Robert Frank’s rough, highly
charged images have had a profound influence worldwide on several generations
of artists. His fame rests largely on one book, The Americans (1959). A project of epic proportions—to document
American culture and society—Frank’s images cut through the clichés and
sentimentality that characterized most photography of the post-war era by
presenting cars, juke boxes, diners, gas stations, and even the road itself as
more insightful symbols for contemporary American life than sweeping, majestic
landscapes.
Provenance Research Ongoing Exhibition HistoryLoaned to San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, for "Public Information: Desire, Disaster, Document," from Jan. 18 - Apr. 30, 1995 (LN:95.7).
Exhibited "Target Collection of American Photography: A Century in Pictures",
The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston December 3 - February 25, 2007
Austin Museum of Art May 19 - August 12, 2007
Art Museum of South Texas, Corpus Christi June 5 - August 24, 2008
Cataloguing data may change with further research.
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