Since the early 1980s, Graham has rendered the world around him with allegiance to photography’s documentary traditions and an embrace of its capacity to uncover hidden truths of our everyday lives. A1: The Great North Road is a taut series of forty portraits, landscapes, and vignettes made along the A1 highway, the metaphorical spine of England, in 1981–82—Graham’s answer to the heralded American road trips of photographers Walker Evans and Robert Frank. Like the hand-processed chromogenic color prints Graham made at the time, the pigmented inkjet prints on view here (made in 2011) encompass a virtuosic range, including the delicately nuanced grays of the storied English weather and the seductively vibrant color of roadside services. Graham’s insistent attention to lorry drivers and waitresses, painted signs and fluorescent lights along “The Great North Road” belies the sense that with the construction of the more efficient, faster M1, this road, and life along it, might fall short of the expectations conveyed by its name.