Born in 1941, Larry Fink was a teenager in the 1950s in an America
on the cusp of radical social change. Growing up on Long Island in
New York, Larry Fink was disinterested in the consumer-driven
culture of 1950s' America. A disaffected teenager, his parents
transferred him to art school where his career as a photographer
began to flourish. His parents were supportive of his interest in
the arts, and Fink would later drop out of college to join a circle
of artists living in Greenwich Village. Fink spent the 1960s
watching and learning from the prominent photographers of the time:
Henri Cartier- Bresson, Robert Frank, W. Eugene Smith, and in many
ways, his photographic aesthetic and rebellious spirit encapsulate
the dramatic lose of innocence that the US underwent after the
assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963. photographic mentor.
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