Robert Frank: Influential Swiss-American photographer dies at 94

News imageGetty Images Photographer Robert Frank attends the opening of "Robert Frank, Books And Films, 1947 - 2016" at The Tisch Galleries on 28 January 2016 in New York City.Getty Images

Robert Frank, one of the most influential photographers of the 20th Century, has died at the age of 94.

Frank, who was born in Switzerland but emigrated to the United States in 1947, was best known for his work The Americans - a book which chronicled his 10,000-mile journey across America at the height of the Cold War,

First published in France and then in the US. It was widely condemned by critics, as it depicted a country sharply at odds with the America portrayed by Hollywood and the ad men.

Earl A Powell III, art historian and museum director, said the work showed "a people plagued by racism, often ill-served by their politicians, intoxicated with the media and celebrities, and infatuated with speed, movement, and even the road itself".

News imageGetty Images People look at rare Robert Frank photographs from his book "The Americans" at Sotheby's on 17 December 2015 in New York City.Getty Images

Frank shot on a small 35mm camera without a motor, so unlike today where you'd find near identical frames sides by side, his contact sheets reveal how he has moved through the crowd, seizing moments of interest.

Ultimately, The Americans is a book that flows from front to back, a visual poem where sequencing was all important.

News imageAlamy Enlarged contact sheets from photographer Robert Frank's groundbreaking book "The Americans" at Blue Sky Gallery in Portland, Oregon, USA.Alamy
Contact sheets from The Americans
News imageRobert Frank courtesy Pace/MacGill Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey, 1955Robert Frank courtesy Pace/MacGill
Parade - Hoboken, New Jersey, 1955, from The Americans
News imageRobert Frank courtesy Pace/MacGill Trolley - New Orleans, 1955Robert Frank courtesy Pace/MacGill
Trolley - New Orleans, 1955, from The Americans
News imageRobert Frank, courtesy Pace/MacGill Charleston, South Carolina, 1955Robert Frank, courtesy Pace/MacGill
Charleston, South Carolina, 1955, from The Americans
News imageRobert Frank, courtesy Pace/MacGill View from hotel window - Butte, Montana, 1956Robert Frank, courtesy Pace/MacGill
View from hotel window - Butte, Montana, 1956, from The Americans

Frank's loose style broke the mould. He shot around 28,000 images that were edited down to 83 for a book that rewrote the rules of photo-journalism.

Beat poet Jack Kerouac wrote in the preface to the book's US edition, Frank "sucked a sad poem right out of America on to film."

Frank went on to make a number of films, including a documentary about the Rolling Stones 1972 tour of America which the group banned from being shown as it captured moments of drug taking.

News imageRobert Frank, courtesy Pace/MacGill Wales, Ben James, 1953Robert Frank, courtesy Pace/MacGill
Wales, Ben James, 1953
News imageRobert Frank, courtesy Pace/MacGill New York City, 7 Bleecker Street, September, 1993Robert Frank, courtesy Pace/MacGill
New York City, 7 Bleecker Street, September, 1993

"He never crossed over into celebrity," said photographer Nan Goldin. "He's famous because he made a mark. He collected the world."

Both of his children have passed away, his daughter was killed in a plane crash aged just 20 and his son Pablo took his own life in 1994.

But Frank will be remembered as one of the greatest photographers of the 20th century and beyond.

News imageFred Stein Archive/Archive Photos/Getty Images Robert Frank holding a pre-war Leica camera, 1954Fred Stein Archive/Archive Photos/Getty Images
Robert Frank holding a pre-war Leica camera, 1954
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