Brigitte Mulholland is pleased to present American Normal, the gallery's first solo
exhibition with Atlanta-based photographer Jill Frank, opening Wednesday, May 6,
2026 and organised by Sean Fader. The show brings together a new group of portraits drawn from Frank's ongoing investigation into the rituals, archetypes, and uneasy theater of growing up American.
Photographed primarily on 4x5 film with the composure of classical portraiture, Frank's
subjects appear mid-performance in the rehearsed ceremonies that structure American
life: dances, beach parties, children's costume contests, spring break, social events and
competitions, and the smaller rites in between. At first glance, the pictures resemble the
images Americans already make of themselves — yearbook poses, vacation snapshots,
prom portraits, the soft iconography of a country that has learned to photograph its own
adolescence. Held a beat longer, they become something stranger: monuments to the
private psychic labor that ordinary American life requires.
"I want to make these moments important, big and visible" Frank says. "Rather than
categorize them as whatever youth experiences, I'm interested in the fact that these
kids survived something — something tense, something intense — and I want to treat
that as the triumph it is." The resulting work sits between portraiture, documentary, and
something closer to ceremony — refusing the critique common to teenage activities and
asking the viewer to see them as moments of real consequence.
Frank's America is neither sentimentalized nor condemned; it is looked at carefully, at
length, and on its own terms. None of these people are performing for us, exactly — they
are performing for one another, for the unseen gods of social media, and for themselves,
inside the unspoken rules of a social world that teaches belonging through small
humiliations, self-surveillance, and the constant calibration of what it takes to be an
influence. What Frank photographs, finally, is that calibration — the body in the act of
learning the code.
Her pictures are endearing and awkward, tender and sharp-edged, faintly ridiculous and
quietly heroic, often in the same frame. They offer a slower, closer look at the ordinary
theater from which America's louder images are made: the rites of passage that shape
how Americans see themselves, and how the rest of the world sees them. Frank's work
belongs to the tradition of photographers who have made American ordinariness
monumental — though its sensibility is her own: patient, unsparing, and generous
toward its subjects in equal measure.
Jill Frank (b. 1978) is an American photographer based in Atlanta. She holds a BA from
Bard College and an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and is an
Assistant Professor of Photography at Georgia State University. Her work has been
exhibited nationally and internationally, with solo exhibitions at the Museum of
Contemporary Art, Chicago and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Georgia, and recent
inclusion in Truth Told Slant at the High Museum of Art, Atlanta. Reviews of her work
have appeared in Artforum, Art in America, and The Paris Review.