Tuolumne
Veteran
The advent of the Robert Frank exhibit of "The Americans" at the Met in New York has unleashed a tide of new commentary on the famous photo book. I cite this from Anthony Lane's review in the Sept. 14 "New Yorker":
"The happiest picture in 'The Americans', entitled 'City Hall -- Reno, Nevada' shows a couple, presumably just married, with a water fountain where they might have hoped for an altar. Only at a pinch does their posture seem like celebration; he hugs her as you do when pulling someone back from the brink. Does she look down out of shyness, or into the future's gulf? No wonder Frank despised the heartening photographic layouts in 'Life' -- 'those goddamned stories with a beginning and an end.'"
The photo accompanies the text in the article. I have looked at this photo over and over, read and reread Lane's remarks and must confess - I just don't see it. Granted the photo is ambiguous, but even with Lane's remarks I can't get myself to see what he imagines in the photo. Do you see it?
I can't help but think that a massive amount of knowledge about the photographer, his philosophy, the history of the times and Frank's non-photographic philosophy about them, is required for such an interpretation. In other words, I don't think the meaning is in the photo, so much as what is known about the photos and their maker.
What do you think?
/T
"The happiest picture in 'The Americans', entitled 'City Hall -- Reno, Nevada' shows a couple, presumably just married, with a water fountain where they might have hoped for an altar. Only at a pinch does their posture seem like celebration; he hugs her as you do when pulling someone back from the brink. Does she look down out of shyness, or into the future's gulf? No wonder Frank despised the heartening photographic layouts in 'Life' -- 'those goddamned stories with a beginning and an end.'"
The photo accompanies the text in the article. I have looked at this photo over and over, read and reread Lane's remarks and must confess - I just don't see it. Granted the photo is ambiguous, but even with Lane's remarks I can't get myself to see what he imagines in the photo. Do you see it?
I can't help but think that a massive amount of knowledge about the photographer, his philosophy, the history of the times and Frank's non-photographic philosophy about them, is required for such an interpretation. In other words, I don't think the meaning is in the photo, so much as what is known about the photos and their maker.
What do you think?
/T
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