Robert Frank's 'Mary's Book' Goes on Rare View in Boston

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The Americans (1958) wasn’t the first photobook Robert Frank ever made. That would be 40 Fotos (1946), a hand-bound compilation of work which the revolutionary American photographer produced while still apprenticing in Switzerland. Frank made three more over the next six years—including a scrapbook for his soon-to-be wife, artist Mary Lockspeiser. This month, “Mary’s Book” gets a rare outing at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Thirteen black and white photos of daily life in Paris tessellated across two pages.

Robert Frank, Spread from Mary’s Book (1949). © The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation and © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Frank made this book during his first trip back to Europe after moving to America in 1947. Its images are aching and romantic, and Mary Frank held his relic tight. It ended up in the MFA’s collection only three years ago, courtesy of noted photography dealer Howard Greenberg.

A black and white photograph of two men in black coats and hats, one facing away with a single tulip clutched behind his back.

Robert Frank, Tulip/Paris, From Flowers in Paris series; man holding tulip behind back (1950). Photo: © The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation, courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Starting December 21, “Robert Frank: Mary’s Book” will present the original scrapbook in full for the first time ever, alongside a few other related photographs Frank produced in Paris around this same time. The exhibition joins a slate of shows celebrating the late photographer’s 100th birthday this past year. At the MFA, “Robert Frank: Mary’s Book” also helps commemorate a century since the museum started collecting photography.

A black and white photograph depicting the exterior of a train labeled "Circus" with graffiti on it.

Robert Frank, Paris, Trolley car with “CIRCUS” painted on side (1949). Photo: © The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation, courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

This keepsake wasn’t made to be exhibited, but rather to be cherished, and the intimacy is palpable. More than 70 photos imbue icons of everyday life in Paris with pensive longing. These images play out across six pages nestled into each other, assembled and annotated in the photographer’s own hand. According to curator Kristen Gersh, “Mary’s Book” marked the first time Frank paired pictures with text.

A scan of two pages featuring black and white photographs of monuments throughout Paris, with handwritten notes scrawled alongside them.

Robert Frank, page spread from Mary’s Book (1949). © The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation and © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

The exhibition also marks the first time the public will be able to see the full scrapbook all at once. Each page will stand upright across specially designed cases, rendering both sides of every page visible.

A black and white photograph depicting a cobblestone street lined with streetlamps.

Robert Frank, Paris, Cobblestone street (1949). © The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation, courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

The features of Frank’s work that made him a sensation 10 years later abound throughout these pages. Melancholy and buoyant curiosity intermingle. Frank clearly missed his lover back in America. He also maintained and displayed delight.

A black and white photograph depicting an empty, snowy park speckled with chairs and one lone couple, as seen from above.

Robert Frank, detail from Mary’s Book (1949). © The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation and © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

“I am particularly drawn to the spreads on Parisian park chairs,” Gersh said in an email. “Frank described seeing the chairs pretty much all over Paris and wrote to Mary that when the chairs are alone, they seem sad—perhaps a reflection of his own emotions.”

A black and white photograph of a folding chair on bare dirt ground.

Robert Frank, Paris, Folding Chair (1949). © The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation, courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

“Frank’s documenting of chairs includes pictures of both intentional and haphazard formations; he anthropomorphizes them and has these objects represent human feelings and emotions,” Gersh continued. “In the center left of one spread is a picture of a lone, partially folded chair resting in a fragile fashion on its collapsed legs. This chair standing alone is perhaps the chair most imbued with animistic qualities and Frank himself found lasting importance in this lone chair as it was found in a frame in his apartment at the end of his life.”

A sepia-tinged black and white photo of a couple standing far away on the other edge of a wide open public park.

Robert Frank, Detail from Mary’s Book (1949). Photo: © The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation and © Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Couples reappear, too, and not just pairs of people, but also in more subtle forms, like a diptych depicting a double advertisement. Such moments demonstrate Frank’s adeptness with symbolism, which matured throughout his later film practice and after his move to Nova Scotia. “Mary’s Book” presents an unparalleled opportunity to encounter this titan a bit more personally.

Two side-by-side black and white phographs depicting a man in a hat beside French advertising text.

Robert Frank, Paris Diptych; “Balzac Helder Scala Vivienne” poster (1949). Photo: © The June Leaf and Robert Frank Foundation, courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

“Robert Frank: Mary’s Book” will be on view fat the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 465 Huntington Ave, Boston, Massachusetts, through June 22, 2025

Source Credit:  Content and images from Artnet News.  Read the original article - https://news.artnet.com/art-world/robert-frank-marys-book-boston-show-2580790