Where Are We Now? American People and Places, 1955–2025, presented at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, arrives at a pivotal cultural moment. As the United States approaches its 250th anniversary, the exhibition reflects on seven decades of photographs that have attempted to describe, question, and sometimes challenge the nation’s sense of itself. Bringing together landscapes and street photography from across the country, the installation traces a restless visual conversation about belonging, division, and shared ground.
The exhibition opens with the work of
Robert Frank, whose landmark 1958 book
The Americans reshaped the language of documentary photography. Traveling across the United States in the mid-1950s, Frank produced images that were unsentimental and piercing. His photographs revealed racial injustice, social isolation, and the quiet contradictions embedded in everyday life. Though initially met with resistance,
The Americans has come to be regarded as a defining portrait of postwar America—at once critical and deeply affectionate.
From that starting point, the exhibition unfolds across generations. Photographers from diverse backgrounds extend and complicate Frank’s inquiry, turning their lenses toward highways and housing developments, parades and protests, deserts and downtown corners. The American landscape appears alternately expansive and constrained, marked by migration, industry, inequality, and reinvention. Faces emerge from crowds; solitary figures linger beneath vast skies. Each image contributes a fragment to a broader meditation on national identity.
Rather than offering conclusions,
Where Are We Now? poses a question that resonates beyond the gallery walls. The works suggest that the country’s story is not singular but layered, composed of overlapping experiences and unresolved tensions. Yet within these photographs—amid their candor and critique—there remains a persistent search for connection. In looking closely at one another and at the spaces we inhabit, the exhibition asks what it might mean, despite profound differences, to imagine a shared future and to hold together a complex, unfinished whole.
Image:
1955 (negative); 1969 (print)
Parade, Hoboken, New Jersey
© Robert Frank