The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Famed photograph­er dies in Cape Breton

Robert Frank known for book ‘The Americans’ and documentar­y about Rolling Stones

- ELIZABETH PATTERSON

SYDNEY — “Always keep your eyes open.”

It was that advice that famed art photograph­er Robert Frank gave to fellow photograph­er Bob Martin of Port Hood, N.S., who remembered Frank on Tuesday as a kind, “wonderful man.”

The reclusive Frank, who died in Cape Breton on Monday, found peace in rural Nova Scotia summers after the fame which followed his seminal book “The Americans,” first published in 1958.

The book is a collection of hauntingly stark vignettes of life in the U.S. that show the realities, rather than the optimism, of that time period and is now considered a seminal work in American photograph­y.

Although born in Switzerlan­d and known for his work in the United States, Frank, 94, had spent his summers in Mabou since 1971.

Reached in Calgary where he was visiting family, Bob Martin remembers when Frank used to visit his photograph­y studio in Port Hawkesbury in the 1990s.

“He had a Hasselblad and I’d develop his film,” Martin said. “He would tell me these stories while his wife June would run errands.

“He was a very private man who had a lot of wisdom.”

Frank, who declined most requests for interviews and appearance­s, was also known for his films, most notably a 1972 documentar­y of the Rolling Stones which showed the band on tour engaging in drug use and group sex and which the courts had largely prevented from being shown. Frank’s photograph­y appeared on the cover of their album, “Exile On Main St.”

Frank also made, with Rudy Wurlitzer, the film “Candy Mountain” about a musician who comes from New York to Cape Breton seeking an elusive guitar maker.

Frank has said that film has reflected his own life’s journey from New York City to Nova Scotia.

He is survived by his wife June Leaf, a well-known artist. He was predecease­d by a daughter and a son.

 ?? SUBMITTED ?? “Trolley, New Orleans 1955” is one of Robert Frank’s bestknown photograph­s and is from his book, “The Americans.” The famed photograph­er died Monday. He has spent summers in Cape Breton since 1971.
SUBMITTED “Trolley, New Orleans 1955” is one of Robert Frank’s bestknown photograph­s and is from his book, “The Americans.” The famed photograph­er died Monday. He has spent summers in Cape Breton since 1971.

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