Robert Frank

1924–2019

Swiss-born Robert Frank made some of the most influential contributions to twentieth-century American photography with his candid, unvarnished images of everyday citizens. Frank worked as a commercial photographer at the outset of his career, taking photographs for magazines such as Harper’s Bazaar, Vogue, and Life. After receiving a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1955, he spent the next two years driving across the United States and capturing what he saw as naturalized American culture. A selection of these photos were published in his 1957 photo book, The Americans, and offered a stark contrast to the prevailing image of an idealized postwar America. In 1959, Frank began exploring avant-garde filmmaking and continued to work in both film and photography.

Entries in the Posen Library by This Creator

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Yom Kippur, East River, New York City

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Though this photograph of Orthodox Jews at the East River has long been captioned as having been taken on Yom Kippur, it is much more likely that it was taken on the first afternoon of Rosh Hashanah…