Robert Frank

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Book images

The lines of my hands

1989
Other Artists:
Book contributor(s):
Edition:
2nd
Edition size:
Out of Print
Prior edition(s):
1972
Hardcover in DJ
ISBN:
Condition: Near Fine

After 'The Americans', 'The Lines of My Hand' is arguably Robert Frank's most important book and without doubt the publication that established his autobiographical, sometimes confessional, approach to bookmaking. The book was originally published by Yugensha in Tokyo in 1972. 'The Lines of My Hand' is structured chronologically and presents selections from every stage of Frank's work until 1972--from early photos in Switzerland in 1945-46, to images of his travels in Peru, Paris, Valencia, London and Wales, and to contact sheets from his 1955-56 journey through the US that resulted in The Americans and made him famous. Here too are intimate photos of Frank's young family, later photo-collages and stills from films including 'Pull My Daisy' (1959) and 'About Me: A Musical' (1971). This structure itself mirrors the rhythm of Frank's life but it is his short personal texts, like diary entries, that fully bring his voice into the book.

Robert Frank

Picture(s) of signatures and/or recto
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After 'The Americans', 'The Lines of My Hand' is arguably Robert Frank's most important book and without doubt the publication that established his autobiographical, sometimes confessional, approach to bookmaking. The book was originally published by Yugensha in Tokyo in 1972. 'The Lines of My Hand' is structured chronologically and presents selections from every stage of Frank's work until 1972--from early photos in Switzerland in 1945-46, to images of his travels in Peru, Paris, Valencia, London and Wales, and to contact sheets from his 1955-56 journey through the US that resulted in The Americans and made him famous. Here too are intimate photos of Frank's young family, later photo-collages and stills from films including 'Pull My Daisy' (1959) and 'About Me: A Musical' (1971). This structure itself mirrors the rhythm of Frank's life but it is his short personal texts, like diary entries, that fully bring his voice into the book.