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Robert Frank: Trolley-New Orleans
Alternate title
- Frank: Trolley--New Orleans
- Trolley-New Orleans
By
Abstract
During an extended road trip across the United States, Robert Frank (1924-2019) pointed his camera lens at a passing trolley in New Orleans, took a single exposure and then turned back to bustling Canal Street, where crowds of people swarmed the sidewalks. That single click of the shutter produced a picture with enduring clarity: a row of windows framing the streetcar's passengers: white passengers in the front, Black passengers in the back. Frank captured individual faces gazing from each rectangular frame, from the weary Black man in his work shirt to the young white girl just in front of him, her hand resting on the wooden sign that designated areas segregated by race. In 1958, he wrote: "With these photographs, I have attempted to show a cross-section of the American population. My effort was to express it simply and without confusion." By the time "The Americans" was published in the United States in 1959, with this image now appearing on its front cover, New Orleans streetcars and buses had been desegregated through a 1958 court order. But Jim Crow was still in full swing, the 1960s Civil Rights struggles still ahead. An essay by MoMA curator Lucy Gallun conveys how this image reverberates in new contexts today.
Contributors
Publisher
Publication
New York: Museum of Modern Art, [2021]
Is about
Subject
Type
Language
Classification
ISBN
- 9781633451193
- 1633451194
Annotations / title notes
Notes
- Series name also: MoMA One on One Series
- Includes images of several photographs by Robert Frank, plus pictures by other photographers, and a Jacob Lawrence painting.
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