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    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger, Making of "Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey“ (by Robert Frank, 1955), 2017
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger, Making of "Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey“ (by Robert Frank, 1955), 2017
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger, Making of "Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey“ (by Robert Frank, 1955), 2017 Making Of
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger, Making of "Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey“ (by Robert Frank, 1955), 2017 Making Of
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger, Making of "Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey“ (by Robert Frank, 1955), 2017 Making Of
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger, Making of "Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey“ (by Robert Frank, 1955), 2017 Behind the Scenes
    Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger, Making of "Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey“ (by Robert Frank, 1955), 2017 Behind the Scenes

    Jojakim Cortis & Adrian Sonderegger

    Making of "Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey“ (by Robert Frank, 1955), 2017
    Digital C-Print
    70 x 105 cm
    27 1/2 x 41 3/8 in
    1/6
    Enquire
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    • Making of "Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey“ (by Robert Frank, 1955)
    Robert Frank’s Parade, Hoboken, New Jersey, is one of the seminal photographs from his book The Americans, and one that is immediately identified with its maker. The American flag is...
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    Robert Frank’s Parade, Hoboken, New Jersey, is one of the seminal photographs from his book The
    Americans, and one that is immediately identified with its maker. The American flag is one of several
    central motifs running through The Americans; its ubiquity was a source of deep interest to Frank, who
    noted, ‘I liked the visual, graphic image of that flag, I think it’s a very good flag.’ Indeed, the stars-and-
    stripes appears throughout the book in several signature images, suspended in mid-air at a Fourth of
    July picnic, emerging from the bell of a tuba at a Chicago political rally, hanging between presidential
    portraits on the wall of a Detroit bar, and elsewhere. In Frank’s handling, this highly-charged national
    symbol appears as opaque or translucent, as a statement of national pride or simply as an accessory
    to the pageantry of American politics.



    Parade, Hoboken, New Jersey, was taken in March 1955 on the occasion of the city’s centennial. In it,
    the faces of the two figures are obscured, one by shadow and the other by the flag itself. Of all of
    Frank’s flag images, Parade is the most reflective of the decade that saw the intensification of the Cold
    War and the McCarthy hearings. Frank’s dual status as an outsider—as an artist, and as a
    European—gave him a unique vantage point from which to penetrate American culture and create an
    image now regarded as one of the signature photographs of America made in the 20th century.




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