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Wikipedia

Robert Capa

Robert Capa (born Endre Ernő Friedmann;[1] October 22, 1913 – May 25, 1954) was a Hungarian–American war photographer and photojournalist. He is considered by some to be the greatest combat and adventure photographer in history.[2]

Robert Capa
Capa on assignment in Spain, using a Eyemo 35 mm movie camera, photographed by Gerda Taro.
Born
Endre Ernő Friedmann[1]

October 22, 1913
DiedMay 25, 1954(1954-05-25) (aged 40)
Resting placeAmawalk Hill Cemetery, New York
NationalityHungarian, American (since 1946)
Known forWar photography

Friedman had fled political repression in Hungary when he was a teenager, moving to Berlin, where he enrolled in college. He witnessed the rise of Hitler, which led him to move to Paris, where he met and began to work with his professional partner Gerda Taro, and they began to publish their work separately. He subsequently covered five wars: the Spanish Civil War, the Second Sino-Japanese War, World War II across Europe, the 1948 Arab–Israeli War, and the First Indochina War, with his photos published in major magazines and newspapers.[3] He was killed when he stepped on a landmine in Vietnam.

During his career he risked his life numerous times, most dramatically as the only civilian photographer landing on Omaha Beach on D-Day. He documented the course of World War II in London, North Africa, Italy, and the liberation of Paris. His friends and colleagues included Ernest Hemingway, Irwin Shaw, John Steinbeck and director John Huston.

In 1947, for his work recording World War II in pictures, U.S. general Dwight D. Eisenhower awarded Capa the Medal of Freedom. That same year, Capa co-founded Magnum Photos in Paris. The organization was the first cooperative agency for worldwide freelance photographers. Hungary has issued a stamp and a gold coin in his honor.

Early years

Capa was born Endre Ernő Friedmann to the Jewish family of Júlia (née Berkovits) and Dezső Friedmann in Budapest, Austria-Hungary, on October 22, 1913.[2] His mother, Julianna Henrietta Berkovits was a native of Nagykapos (now Veľké Kapušany, Slovakia) and Dezső Friedmann came from the Transylvanian village of Csucsa (now Ciucea, Romania).[2] At the age of 18, he was accused of alleged communist sympathies and was forced to flee Hungary.[4]: 154 

He moved to Berlin, where he enrolled at Berlin University where he worked part-time as a darkroom assistant for income and then became a staff photographer for the German photographic agency, Dephot.[4]: 154  It was during that period that the Nazi Party came into power, which made Capa, a Jew, decide to leave Germany and move to Paris.[4]: 154 

Career

Capa's first published photograph was of Leon Trotsky making a speech in Copenhagen on "The Meaning of the Russian Revolution" in 1932.[5]

After moving to Paris, he became professionally involved with Gerta Pohorylle, later known as Gerda Taro,[6] a German-Jewish photographer who had moved to Paris for the same reasons he did.[4]: 154  The two of them decided to work under the alias Capa at this time, and she contributed to much of the early work. However, the two of them later separated aliases, with Pohorylle quickly creating her own alias 'Gerda Taro', and began publishing their work independently. Capa and Taro developed a romantic relationship alongside their professional one. Capa proposed and Taro refused, but they continued their involvement. He also shared a darkroom with French photographer Henri Cartier-Bresson, with whom he would later co-found the Magnum Photos cooperative.[4]: 154 [7]

Spanish Civil War, 1936

 
A sculpture by Igael Tumarkin inspired by Death of a Loyalist Soldier

From 1936 to 1939, Capa worked in Spain, photographing the Spanish Civil War, along with Taro and David Seymour.[8]

It was during that war that Capa took the photo now called The Falling Soldier (1936), purported to show the death of a Republican soldier. The photo was published in magazines in France and then by Life magazine and Picture Post.[9] The authenticity of the photo was later questioned, with evidence including other photos from the scene suggesting it was staged.[a] Picture Post, a pioneering photojournalism magazine published in the United Kingdom, had once described then twenty-five year old Capa as "the greatest war photographer in the world."[4]: 155 

The next year, in 1937, Taro died when the motor vehicle on which she was traveling (apparently standing on the footboard) collided with an out-of-control tank. She had been returning from a photographic assignment covering the Battle of Brunete.[4]

Capa accompanied then-journalist and author Ernest Hemingway to photograph the war, which Hemingway would later describe in his novel, For Whom the Bell Tolls (1940).[12] Life magazine published an article about Hemingway and his time in Spain, along with numerous photos by Capa.[13]

In December 2007, three boxes filled with rolls of film, containing 4,500 35mm negatives of the Spanish Civil War by Capa, Taro, and Chim (David Seymour), which had been considered lost since 1939, were discovered in Mexico.[14][15][16][17][18] In 2011, Trisha Ziff directed a film about those images, entitled The Mexican Suitcase.[19]

All you could do was to help individuals caught up in war, try to raise their spirits for a moment, perhaps flirt a little, make them laugh; ... and you could photograph them, to let them know that somebody cared.

Robert Capa[20]

Chinese resistance to Imperial Japan, 1938

In 1938, he traveled to the Chinese city of Hankou, now within Wuhan, to document the resistance to the Japanese invasion.[21] He sent his images to Life magazine, which published some of them in its May 23, 1938 issue.[22]

 
"Chinese Soldier" by Capa

World War II

At the start of World War II, Capa was in New York City, having moved there from Paris to look for work, and to escape Nazi persecution. During the war, Capa was sent to various parts of the European Theatre on photography assignments.[23] He first photographed for Collier's Weekly, before switching to Life after he was fired by Collier's. He was the only "enemy alien" photographer for the Allies.[citation needed] On October 7, 1943, Robert Capa was in Naples with Life reporter Will Lang Jr., and there he photographed the Naples post office bombing.[24]

 
A display of some of Capa's works

D-Day, Omaha beach, 1944

A group of images known as "The Magnificent Eleven" were taken by Capa on D-Day.[25] Taking part in the Allied invasion, Capa was attached to the 16th Infantry Regiment, 1st Infantry Division ("Big Red One") on Omaha Beach.[26][7][27] The US personnel attacking Omaha Beach faced some of the heaviest resistance from German troops inside the bunkers of the Atlantic Wall. Photographic historian A. D. Coleman has suggested that Capa traveled to the beach in the same landing craft as Colonel George A. Taylor, commander of the 16th Infantry Regiment, who landed 1½ hours after the first wave, near Colleville-sur-Mer.[28]

Capa subsequently stated that he took 106 pictures, but later discovered that all but 11 had been destroyed. This incident may have been caused by Capa's cameras becoming waterlogged at Normandy,[7] although the more frequent allegation is that a young assistant accidentally destroyed the pictures while they were being developed at the photo lab in London.[29] However, this narrative has been challenged by Coleman and others.[28] In 2016, John G. Morris, who was picture editor at the London bureau of Life in 1944, agreed that it was more likely that Capa captured 11 images in total on D-Day.[28][30] The 11 prints were included in Life magazine's issue on June 19, 1944,[31] with captions written by magazine staffers, as Capa did not provide Life with notes or a verbal description of what they showed.[28]

The captions have since been shown to be erroneous, as were subsequent descriptions of the images by Capa himself.[28] For example, men described by Life as taking cover behind a hedgehog obstacle were members of Gap Assault Team 10 – a combined US Navy/US Army demolition unit tasked with blowing up obstacles and clearing the way for landing craft.[28][32]

 
A picture of refugees taken by Capa

The Shaved Woman of Chartres

Capa took photographs during the Allied invasion of France in 1944. His picture The Shaved Woman of Chartres, taken on 16 August 1944, shows a woman whose head has been shaved as a punishment for collaboration with the Nazis.[33]

The Picture of the Last Man to Die

 
Capa House in Leipzig 2015

On April 18, 1945, Capa captured images of a fight to secure a bridge in Leipzig, Germany. These pictures included an image of Raymond J. Bowman's death by sniper fire. This image was published in a spread in Life magazine with the caption "The picture of the last man to die."[34]

Post-war Soviet Union, 1947

In 1947 Capa traveled to the Soviet Union with his friend, the American writer John Steinbeck.[35] They originally met when they shared a room in an Algiers hotel with other war correspondents before the Allied invasion of Italy in 1943.[35] They reconnected in New York, where Steinbeck told him he was thinking about visiting the Soviet Union, now that the war was over.[35]

Capa suggested they go there together and collaborate on a book, with Capa documenting the war-torn nation with photographs.[36] The trip resulted in Steinbeck's, A Russian Journal, which was published both as a book and a syndicated newspaper serial.[35] Photos were taken in Moscow, Kyiv, Tbilisi, Batumi and among the ruins of Stalingrad.[35][37][38][39] They remained good friends until Capa's death; Steinbeck took the news of Capa's death very hard.[35][40]

Magnum Photos agency, 1947

In 1947, Capa founded the cooperative venture Magnum Photos in Paris with Henri Cartier-Bresson, William Vandivert, David Seymour, and George Rodger. It was a cooperative agency to manage work for and by freelance photographers, and developed a reputation for the excellence of its photo-journalists. In 1952, he became the president.[citation needed]

Founding of Israel, 1948

Capa toured Israel during its founding and while it was being attacked by neighboring states. He took the numerous photographs that accompanied Irwin Shaw's book, Report on Israel.[41]

 
People gathered to view Capa's work in the Capa-House

Documenting film productions, 1953

In 1953 he joined screenwriter Truman Capote and director John Huston in Italy where Capa was assigned to photograph the making of the film, Beat the Devil.[42] During their off time they, and star Humphrey Bogart, enjoyed playing poker.[43][44]

First Indochina War and death, 1954

In the early 1950s, Capa travelled to Japan for an exhibition associated with Magnum Photos. While there, Life magazine asked him to go on assignment to Southeast Asia, where the French had been fighting for eight years in the First Indochina War. Although he had claimed a few years earlier that he was finished with war, Capa accepted the job. He accompanied a French regiment located in Thái Bình Province with two Time-Life journalists, John Mecklin and Jim Lucas. On 25 May 1954, the regiment was passing through a dangerous area under fire when Capa decided to leave his jeep and go up the road to photograph the advance. Capa was killed when he stepped on a landmine near the road.[45][4]: 155 [46]

He was 40 at the time of his death. He is buried in plot #189 at Amawalk Hill Cemetery (also called Friends Cemetery), Amawalk, Westchester County, New York along with his mother, Julia, and his brother, Cornell Capa.

 
One of Capa's contact sheets.

Personal life

Capa was born into a middle-class Jewish family in Budapest,[47] where his parents were tailors; Capa's mother was a successful fashion shop owner, and his father was an employee of her shop.[48] Capa had two brothers: a younger brother, photographer Cornell Capa and an older brother, László Friedmann. Cornell moved to Paris in 1936 to join his older brother Capa, where he found an interest in photography instead of staying in the field of medicine.[49] Not much is known of Capa's older brother László, except that he married Angela Maria Friedmann-Csordas in 1933. He died a year later and was buried next to his father in the Kozma Utca Jewish Cemetery.[50]

At the age of 18, Capa moved to Vienna, later relocated to Prague, and finally settled in Berlin: all cities that were centers of artistic and cultural ferment in this period. He started studies in journalism at the German Political College, but the Nazi Party instituted restrictions on Jews and banned them from colleges. Capa relocated to Paris, where he adopted the name 'Robert Capa' in 1934. At that time, he had already been a hobby-photographer.

In 1934 "André Friedman", as he still called himself then, met Gerda Pohorylle, a German Jewish refugee. The couple lived in Paris where André taught Gerda photography. Together they created the name and image of "Robert Capa" as a famous American photographer, and at the beginning of the war both photographers published their work under the pseudonym of Robert Capa.[51] Gerda took the name Gerda Taro and became successful in her own right. She travelled with Capa to Spain in 1936 intending to document the Spanish Civil War. In July 1937, Capa traveled briefly to Paris while Gerda remained in Madrid. She was killed near Brunete during a battle. Capa, who was reportedly engaged to her, was deeply shocked and never married.

In February 1943 Capa met Elaine Justin, then married to the actor John Justin.[citation needed] They fell in love and the relationship lasted until the end of the war. Capa spent most of his time in the frontline. Capa called the redheaded Elaine "Pinky," and wrote about her in his war memoir, Slightly Out of Focus. In 1945, Elaine Justin broke up with Capa; she later married Chuck Romine.

Some months later Capa became the lover of the actress Ingrid Bergman, who was touring in Europe to entertain American soldiers.[52]p. 176 In December 1945, Capa followed her to Hollywood. The relationship ended in the summer of 1946 when Capa traveled to Turkey.[7]

Legacy

 
Monument to Robert Capa's death in Normandy, France

The government of Hungary issued a postage stamp in Capa's honor in 2013.[53] That same year it issued a 5,000-forint ($20) gold coin, also in his honor, showing an engraving of Capa.[54]

His younger brother, Cornell Capa, also a photographer, worked to preserve and promote Robert's legacy as well as develop his own identity and style. He founded the International Fund for Concerned Photography in 1966. To give this collection a permanent home, he founded the International Center of Photography in New York City in 1974. This was one of the foremost and most extensive conservation efforts on photography to be developed. Indeed, Capa and his brother believed strongly in the importance of photography and its preservation, much like film would later be perceived and duly treated in a similar way. The Overseas Press Club created the Robert Capa Gold Medal in the photographer's honor.[55]

Capa is known for redefining wartime photojournalism. His work came from the trenches as opposed to the more arms-length perspective that was the precedent. He was famed for saying, "If your photographs aren't good enough, you're not close enough."[56]

He is credited with coining the term Generation X. He used it as a title for a photo-essay about the young people reaching adulthood immediately after the Second World War. It was published in 1953 in Picture Post (UK) and Holiday (USA). Capa said, "We named this unknown generation, The Generation X, and even in our first enthusiasm we realised that we had something far bigger than our talents and pockets could cope with."[57]

In 1947, for his work recording World War II in pictures, U.S. general Dwight D. Eisenhower awarded Capa the Medal of Freedom Citation[7][20] The International Center of Photography organized a travelling exhibition titled This Is War: Robert Capa at Work, which displayed Capa's innovations as a photojournalist in the 1930s and 1940s. It includes vintage prints, contact sheets, caption sheets, handwritten observations, personal letters and original magazine layouts from the Spanish Civil War, the Second Sino-Japanese War and World War II. The exhibition appeared at the Barbican Art Gallery, the International Center of Photography of Milan, and the Museu Nacional d'Art de Catalunya in the fall of 2009, before moving to the Nederlands Fotomuseum from October 10, 2009 until January 10, 2010.[58]

In 1976 Capa was posthumously inducted into the International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum.[59]

 
A street in Leipzig named after Capa
 
Commemorative plaque for Capa in Budapest

Politics

As a young boy, Capa was drawn to the Munkakör (Employment Circle), a group of socialist and avant-garde artists, photographers, and intellectuals centered around Budapest. He participated in the demonstrations against the Miklós Horthy regime. In 1931, just before his first photo was published, Capa was arrested by the Hungarian secret police, beaten, and jailed for his radical political activity. A police official's wife—who happened to know his family—won Capa's release on the condition that he would leave Hungary immediately.[5]

The Boston Review has described Capa as "a leftist, and a democrat—he was passionately pro-Loyalist and passionately anti-fascist ..." During the Spanish Civil War, Capa travelled with and photographed the Workers' Party of Marxist Unification (POUM), which resulted in his best-known photograph.[5]

The British magazine Picture Post ran his photos from Spain in the 1930s accompanied by a portrait of Capa, in profile, with the simple description: "He is a passionate democrat, and he lives to take photographs."[5]

In popular culture

  • In 2013, the Japanese Female Musical Theater group Takarazuka Revue produced a musical piece based on the life of Capa. Ms. Ouki Kaname performed the lead role as Capa. The group performed the musical in 2012 in Takarazuka and Tokyo and in 2014 in Nagoya.
  • In Patrick Modiano's novella Afterimage Capa is a mentor for the subject of the novella, Francis Jansen, a photographer who retires to Mexico.
  • In Alfred Hitchcock's movie Rear Window, the protagonist L. B. "Jeff" Jefferies (James Stewart) was partly based on Capa.[60]
  • Poet Owen Sheers wrote a poem about Capa, named Happy Accidents. It can be found in the anthology Skirrid Hill.
  • In English indie rock group Alt-J's 2012 album An Awesome Wave, the love between Capa and Taro, and the circumstances of his death are described in the last track, "Taro".
  • The Austrian rock singer Falco wrote the song "Kamikaze Cappa" in tribute to Capa.[61]

Collections

Publications

Publications by Capa

  • The Battle of Waterloo Road. New York: Random House, 1941. OCLC 654774055. Photographs by Capa. With text by Diana Forbes-Robertson.
  • Invasion!. New York, London: D. Appleton-Century, 1944. OCLC 1022382. Photographs by Capa. With text by Charles Wertenbaker.
  • Slightly Out of Focus. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1947. New York: Modern Library, 2001. ISBN 9780375753961. Text and photographs by Capa. With a foreword by Cornell Capa and an introduction by Richard Whelan. A memoir.
  • Images of War. New York: Grossman, 1964. Text and photographs by Capa. OCLC 284771. With a text by John Steinbeck.
  • Robert Capa: Photographs. New York: Aperture, 1996. ISBN 978-0893816759. New York: Aperture, 2004.
  • Heart of Spain: Robert Capa's Photographs of the Spanish Civil War. New York: Aperture, 1999. ISBN 9780893818319. New York: Aperture, 2005. ISBN 978-1931788021.
  • Robert Capa: The Definitive Collection. London, New York: Phaidon, 2001. ISBN 9780714840673. London, New York: Phaidon, 2004. ISBN 978-0714844497. Edited by Richard Whelan.
  • Robert Capa at Work: This is War!. Göttingen: Steidl, 2009. ISBN 9783865219442. Photographs by Capa. With a foreword by Willis E. Hartshorn, an introduction by Christopher Phillips, and text by Richard Whelan. Published to accompany an exhibition at the International Center of Photography, New York, September 2007 – January 2008. "A detailed examination of six of Robert Capa's most important war reportages from the first half of his career: the Falling Soldier (1936), Chinese resistance to the Japanese invasion (1938), the end of the Spanish Civil War in Catalonia (1938–39), D-Day, the US paratroop invasion of Germany and the liberation of Leipzig (1945)."[69]
    • Questa è la Guerra!: Robert Capa al Lavoro. Italy: Contrasto, 2009. ISBN 9788869651601. Published to accompany an exhibition in Milan, March–June 2009.[70]

Publications with others

Publications about Capa

Notes

  1. ^ The authenticity of the photograph is today in doubt, with some questioning its location, the identity of its subject, and the discovery of staged photographs taken at the same time and place.[10][11]

References

  1. ^ a b . Archived from the original on October 6, 2011. Retrieved February 18, 2009.
  2. ^ a b c Kershaw, Alex. Blood and Champagne: The Life and Times of Robert Capa, Macmillan (2002) ISBN 978-0306813566
  3. ^ Hudson, Berkley (2009). Sterling, Christopher H. (ed.). Encyclopedia of Journalism. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE. pp. 1060–67. ISBN 978-0-7619-2957-4.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h Davenport, Alma. The History of Photography: An Overview, Univ. of New Mexico Press (1991)
  5. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on November 6, 2011. Retrieved August 29, 2010.
  6. ^ "Photo of Gerda Taro". zakhor-online.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  7. ^ a b c d e "Robert Capa’s Longest Day", Vanity Fair, June 2014
  8. ^ "New Works by Photography’s Old Masters", New York Times, April 30, 2009
  9. ^ Ingledew, John. Photography, Laurence King Publishing (2005) p. 184
  10. ^ "Richard Whelan, Proving that Robert Capa's Falling Soldier is Genuine: a Detective Story, American Masters, PBS Website". PBS.
  11. ^ "Iconic Capa war photo was stage: newspaper" July 20, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, AFP
  12. ^ "Photo of Capa (far left) with Hemingway (far right) in Spain". wordpress.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  13. ^ "Life Documents Hemingway's New Novel with War Shots", Life magazine, January 6, 1941
  14. ^ The212BERLIN (August 4, 2011). "The Mexican Suitcase trailer". Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved April 1, 2018 – via YouTube.
  15. ^ "The Capa Cache", New York Times, January 27, 2008
  16. ^ "The Mexican Suitcase, Rediscovered Spanish Civil War Negatives by Capa, Chim, and Taro" February 11, 2021, at the Wayback Machine, International Center of Photography
  17. ^ "Photo of the Spanish Civil War". icp.org. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  18. ^ "The Fascinating Story of The Mexican Suitcase" December 1, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, ORMS
  19. ^ "Meet the DocuWeeks Filmmakers: Trisha Ziff--'The Mexican Suitcase'". Documentary. No. August, 2011. International Documentary Association. Retrieved January 16, 2016.
  20. ^ a b George Stevens Jr., "Robert Capa: A Photographer at War", Washington Post, September 29, 1985
  21. ^ Stephen R. MacKinnon includes photographs by Robert Capa, in Wuhan, 1938: War, Refugees, and the Making of Modern China (Berkeley: University of California Press, 2008).
  22. ^ Capa photos of the Chinese resistance, Life, May 23, 1938
  23. ^ Brenner, Marie. "War Photographer Robert Capa and his Coverage of D-day". Vanity Fair. Retrieved November 21, 2017.
  24. ^ Slightly Out of Focus, Henry Holt and Company, New York, 1947, p. 104
  25. ^ "Photo by Capa on D-Day". pinimg.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  26. ^ D-Day, National WWII Museum
  27. ^ Jay (December 2, 2012). "The Reel Foto: Robert Capa: 20th Century War Photographer". reelfoto.blogspot.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  28. ^ a b c d e f Coleman, A. D. (February 12, 2019). "Alternate History: Robert Capa on D-Day". exposure magazine. Society for Photographic Education. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  29. ^ Simon Kuper, "Interview: John Morris on his friend Robert Capa", Financial Times, May 31, 2013. Retrieved June 1, 2013.
  30. ^ Estrin, James (December 6, 2016). "As He Turns 100, John Morris Recalls a Century in Photojournalism". Lens Blog. New York Times. Retrieved February 18, 2019.
  31. ^ . slightly-out-of-focus.com. Archived from the original on September 30, 2015. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  32. ^ Lt. (jg) H. L. Blackwell, Jr. Report on Naval Combat Demolition Units [NCDUs] In Operation "Neptune" as part of Task Force 122 (5 July, 1944) (19 February 2019).
  33. ^ Match, Paris. "2014 – L'été de la mémoire – La véritable histoire de la tondue de Chartres". parismatch.com.
  34. ^ "Bowman, Raymond J." tracesofwar.com. Retrieved April 23, 2016.
  35. ^ a b c d e f Railsback, Brian E., Meyer, Michael J. A John Steinbeck Encyclopedia, Greenwood Publishing Group (2006) p. 50
  36. ^ "Photo of John Steinbeck and Robert Capa boarding a plane for the USSR, 1947". phaidon.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on October 28, 2016. Retrieved October 28, 2016.
  38. ^ "Photo of Tiflis, Georgia, 1947". pinimg.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  39. ^ . agenda.ge. Archived from the original on October 28, 2016. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  40. ^ "Photo of Capa and Steinbeck". pinimg.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  41. ^ "Robert Capa's Road to Jerusalem", Jewish Review of Books, Winter 2016
  42. ^ "Robert Capa Remembered", Independent UK, October 12, 1996
  43. ^ "Photo of Capa, John Huston and Burl Ives". pinimg.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  44. ^ "Robert Capa Photo Gallery". gettyimages.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  45. ^ Aronson, Marc; Budhos, Marina (2017). Eyes of the World Robert Capa, Gerda Taro, and the Invention of Modern Photojournalism. Macmillan Publishing Group, LLC. ISBN 9780805098358.
  46. ^ Badenbroek, Michael. . army-photographer.com. Archived from the original on May 4, 2016. Retrieved April 28, 2016.
  47. ^ "Robert Capa" April 25, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, Jewish History, Hungary
  48. ^ "Robert Capa".
  49. ^ "Cornell Capa". January 24, 2019.
  50. ^ "Lázsló Friedmann". geni_family_tree.
  51. ^ "Gerda Taro, Robert Capa y los peligros de firmar con un seudónimo masculino". eldiario.es (in Spanish). Retrieved January 23, 2018.
  52. ^ Marton, Kati (2006). The Great Escape: Nine Jews Who Fled Hitler and Changed the World. New York: Simon & Schuster. ISBN 978-0-7432-6115-9. LCCN 2006049162. OCLC 70864519.
  53. ^ "Magyar Posta Ltd. – 2013". Magyar Posta Zrt. Retrieved December 3, 2018.
  54. ^ "Photo of Hungarian gold coin dedicated to Capa". coin-currency.com. Retrieved April 1, 2018.
  55. ^ "Overseas Press Club of America, Awards Archive". Archived from the original on November 5, 2007.
  56. ^ . Magnum Photos. Archived from the original on April 15, 2012.
  57. ^ Ulrich, John (November 1, 2003). "Introduction: A (Sub)cultural Genealogy". In Andrea L. Harris (ed.). GenXegesis: Essays on Alternative Youth. p. 3. ISBN 9780879728625.
  58. ^ Travelling exhibitions: This Is War! Robert Capa at Work May 4, 2009, at the Wayback Machine, International Center of Photography
  59. ^ a b "Robert Capa". International Photography Hall of Fame. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  60. ^ Belton, John (2000). Alfred Hitchcock's Rear Window (PDF). Cambridge, United Kingdom: Cambridge University Press. p. 5. ISBN 0-521-56423-9.
  61. ^ "Rock Me, Falco". www.metafilter.com. Retrieved November 21, 2017.
  62. ^ "Robert Capa". The Art Institute of Chicago.
  63. ^ "Robert Capa | The Falling Soldier". The Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  64. ^ "Robert Capa. Death of a Loyalist Militiaman, Córdoba front, Spain. Late August-early September, 1936 | MoMA".
  65. ^ "Robert Capa: The Definitive Collection". Magnum Photos. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  66. ^ "Robert Capa". International Center of Photography. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  67. ^ "Robert Capa Photographs". Worcester Art Museum. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  68. ^ "Robert Capa". The J Paul Getty Museum. Retrieved February 20, 2020.
  69. ^ Capa, Robert; Whelan, Richard; International Center of Photography (April 1, 2018). Robert Capa at work: this is war!. Steidl ; Thames & Hudson [distributor. OCLC 755099561.
  70. ^ Whelan, Richard; International Center of Photography (April 1, 2018). Questa e la Guerra!: Robert Capa al lavoro. International Center of Photography : Two Contrast. OCLC 772645394.

External links

  • Capa's Photography Portfolio — Magnum Photos
  • PBS biography and analysis of Falling Soldier authenticity
  • Discussion on the authenticity of Capa's "Fallen Republican Soldier" Does it matter if it was faked?
  • Robert Capa's "Lost Negatives"
  • The woman who captured Robert Capa's heart, The Independent, 2010
  • Driven to Shoot on the Frontlines, The Japan Times, 2014

robert, capa, born, endre, ernő, friedmann, october, 1913, 1954, hungarian, american, photographer, photojournalist, considered, some, greatest, combat, adventure, photographer, history, capa, assignment, spain, using, eyemo, movie, camera, photographed, gerda. Robert Capa born Endre Erno Friedmann 1 October 22 1913 May 25 1954 was a Hungarian American war photographer and photojournalist He is considered by some to be the greatest combat and adventure photographer in history 2 Robert CapaCapa on assignment in Spain using a Eyemo 35 mm movie camera photographed by Gerda Taro BornEndre Erno Friedmann 1 October 22 1913Budapest Austria HungaryDiedMay 25 1954 1954 05 25 aged 40 Thai Binh Province French IndochinaResting placeAmawalk Hill Cemetery New YorkNationalityHungarian American since 1946 Known forWar photographyFriedman had fled political repression in Hungary when he was a teenager moving to Berlin where he enrolled in college He witnessed the rise of Hitler which led him to move to Paris where he met and began to work with his professional partner Gerda Taro and they began to publish their work separately He subsequently covered five wars the Spanish Civil War the Second Sino Japanese War World War II across Europe the 1948 Arab Israeli War and the First Indochina War with his photos published in major magazines and newspapers 3 He was killed when he stepped on a landmine in Vietnam During his career he risked his life numerous times most dramatically as the only civilian photographer landing on Omaha Beach on D Day He documented the course of World War II in London North Africa Italy and the liberation of Paris His friends and colleagues included Ernest Hemingway Irwin Shaw John Steinbeck and director John Huston In 1947 for his work recording World War II in pictures U S general Dwight D Eisenhower awarded Capa the Medal of Freedom That same year Capa co founded Magnum Photos in Paris The organization was the first cooperative agency for worldwide freelance photographers Hungary has issued a stamp and a gold coin in his honor Contents 1 Early years 2 Career 2 1 Spanish Civil War 1936 2 2 Chinese resistance to Imperial Japan 1938 2 3 World War II 2 3 1 D Day Omaha beach 1944 2 3 2 The Shaved Woman of Chartres 2 3 3 The Picture of the Last Man to Die 2 4 Post war Soviet Union 1947 2 5 Magnum Photos agency 1947 2 6 Founding of Israel 1948 2 7 Documenting film productions 1953 2 8 First Indochina War and death 1954 3 Personal life 4 Legacy 5 Politics 6 In popular culture 7 Collections 8 Publications 8 1 Publications by Capa 8 2 Publications with others 8 3 Publications about Capa 9 Notes 10 References 11 External linksEarly years EditCapa was born Endre Erno Friedmann to the Jewish family of Julia nee Berkovits and Dezso Friedmann in Budapest Austria Hungary on October 22 1913 2 His mother Julianna Henrietta Berkovits was a native of Nagykapos now Veľke Kapusany Slovakia and Dezso Friedmann came from the Transylvanian village of Csucsa now Ciucea Romania 2 At the age of 18 he was accused of alleged communist sympathies and was forced to flee Hungary 4 154 He moved to Berlin where he enrolled at Berlin University where he worked part time as a darkroom assistant for income and then became a staff photographer for the German photographic agency Dephot 4 154 It was during that period that the Nazi Party came into power which made Capa a Jew decide to leave Germany and move to Paris 4 154 Career EditCapa s first published photograph was of Leon Trotsky making a speech in Copenhagen on The Meaning of the Russian Revolution in 1932 5 After moving to Paris he became professionally involved with Gerta Pohorylle later known as Gerda Taro 6 a German Jewish photographer who had moved to Paris for the same reasons he did 4 154 The two of them decided to work under the alias Capa at this time and she contributed to much of the early work However the two of them later separated aliases with Pohorylle quickly creating her own alias Gerda Taro and began publishing their work independently Capa and Taro developed a romantic relationship alongside their professional one Capa proposed and Taro refused but they continued their involvement He also shared a darkroom with French photographer Henri Cartier Bresson with whom he would later co found the Magnum Photos cooperative 4 154 7 Spanish Civil War 1936 Edit Death of a Loyalist Soldier A sculpture by Igael Tumarkin inspired by Death of a Loyalist Soldier From 1936 to 1939 Capa worked in Spain photographing the Spanish Civil War along with Taro and David Seymour 8 It was during that war that Capa took the photo now called The Falling Soldier 1936 purported to show the death of a Republican soldier The photo was published in magazines in France and then by Life magazine and Picture Post 9 The authenticity of the photo was later questioned with evidence including other photos from the scene suggesting it was staged a Picture Post a pioneering photojournalism magazine published in the United Kingdom had once described then twenty five year old Capa as the greatest war photographer in the world 4 155 The next year in 1937 Taro died when the motor vehicle on which she was traveling apparently standing on the footboard collided with an out of control tank She had been returning from a photographic assignment covering the Battle of Brunete 4 Capa accompanied then journalist and author Ernest Hemingway to photograph the war which Hemingway would later describe in his novel For Whom the Bell Tolls 1940 12 Life magazine published an article about Hemingway and his time in Spain along with numerous photos by Capa 13 In December 2007 three boxes filled with rolls of film containing 4 500 35mm negatives of the Spanish Civil War by Capa Taro and Chim David Seymour which had been considered lost since 1939 were discovered in Mexico 14 15 16 17 18 In 2011 Trisha Ziff directed a film about those images entitled The Mexican Suitcase 19 All you could do was to help individuals caught up in war try to raise their spirits for a moment perhaps flirt a little make them laugh and you could photograph them to let them know that somebody cared Robert Capa 20 Chinese resistance to Imperial Japan 1938 Edit In 1938 he traveled to the Chinese city of Hankou now within Wuhan to document the resistance to the Japanese invasion 21 He sent his images to Life magazine which published some of them in its May 23 1938 issue 22 Chinese Soldier by Capa World War II Edit At the start of World War II Capa was in New York City having moved there from Paris to look for work and to escape Nazi persecution During the war Capa was sent to various parts of the European Theatre on photography assignments 23 He first photographed for Collier s Weekly before switching to Life after he was fired by Collier s He was the only enemy alien photographer for the Allies citation needed On October 7 1943 Robert Capa was in Naples with Life reporter Will Lang Jr and there he photographed the Naples post office bombing 24 A display of some of Capa s works D Day Omaha beach 1944 Edit Main article The Magnificent Eleven A group of images known as The Magnificent Eleven were taken by Capa on D Day 25 Taking part in the Allied invasion Capa was attached to the 16th Infantry Regiment 1st Infantry Division Big Red One on Omaha Beach 26 7 27 The US personnel attacking Omaha Beach faced some of the heaviest resistance from German troops inside the bunkers of the Atlantic Wall Photographic historian A D Coleman has suggested that Capa traveled to the beach in the same landing craft as Colonel George A Taylor commander of the 16th Infantry Regiment who landed 1 hours after the first wave near Colleville sur Mer 28 Capa subsequently stated that he took 106 pictures but later discovered that all but 11 had been destroyed This incident may have been caused by Capa s cameras becoming waterlogged at Normandy 7 although the more frequent allegation is that a young assistant accidentally destroyed the pictures while they were being developed at the photo lab in London 29 However this narrative has been challenged by Coleman and others 28 In 2016 John G Morris who was picture editor at the London bureau of Life in 1944 agreed that it was more likely that Capa captured 11 images in total on D Day 28 30 The 11 prints were included in Life magazine s issue on June 19 1944 31 with captions written by magazine staffers as Capa did not provide Life with notes or a verbal description of what they showed 28 The captions have since been shown to be erroneous as were subsequent descriptions of the images by Capa himself 28 For example men described by Life as taking cover behind a hedgehog obstacle were members of Gap Assault Team 10 a combined US Navy US Army demolition unit tasked with blowing up obstacles and clearing the way for landing craft 28 32 A picture of refugees taken by Capa The Shaved Woman of Chartres Edit Capa took photographs during the Allied invasion of France in 1944 His picture The Shaved Woman of Chartres taken on 16 August 1944 shows a woman whose head has been shaved as a punishment for collaboration with the Nazis 33 The Picture of the Last Man to Die Edit Main article Raymond J Bowman Capa House in Leipzig 2015 On April 18 1945 Capa captured images of a fight to secure a bridge in Leipzig Germany These pictures included an image of Raymond J Bowman s death by sniper fire This image was published in a spread in Life magazine with the caption The picture of the last man to die 34 Post war Soviet Union 1947 Edit In 1947 Capa traveled to the Soviet Union with his friend the American writer John Steinbeck 35 They originally met when they shared a room in an Algiers hotel with other war correspondents before the Allied invasion of Italy in 1943 35 They reconnected in New York where Steinbeck told him he was thinking about visiting the Soviet Union now that the war was over 35 Capa suggested they go there together and collaborate on a book with Capa documenting the war torn nation with photographs 36 The trip resulted in Steinbeck s A Russian Journal which was published both as a book and a syndicated newspaper serial 35 Photos were taken in Moscow Kyiv Tbilisi Batumi and among the ruins of Stalingrad 35 37 38 39 They remained good friends until Capa s death Steinbeck took the news of Capa s death very hard 35 40 Magnum Photos agency 1947 Edit In 1947 Capa founded the cooperative venture Magnum Photos in Paris with Henri Cartier Bresson William Vandivert David Seymour and George Rodger It was a cooperative agency to manage work for and by freelance photographers and developed a reputation for the excellence of its photo journalists In 1952 he became the president citation needed Founding of Israel 1948 Edit Capa toured Israel during its founding and while it was being attacked by neighboring states He took the numerous photographs that accompanied Irwin Shaw s book Report on Israel 41 People gathered to view Capa s work in the Capa House Documenting film productions 1953 Edit In 1953 he joined screenwriter Truman Capote and director John Huston in Italy where Capa was assigned to photograph the making of the film Beat the Devil 42 During their off time they and star Humphrey Bogart enjoyed playing poker 43 44 First Indochina War and death 1954 Edit In the early 1950s Capa travelled to Japan for an exhibition associated with Magnum Photos While there Life magazine asked him to go on assignment to Southeast Asia where the French had been fighting for eight years in the First Indochina War Although he had claimed a few years earlier that he was finished with war Capa accepted the job He accompanied a French regiment located in Thai Binh Province with two Time Life journalists John Mecklin and Jim Lucas On 25 May 1954 the regiment was passing through a dangerous area under fire when Capa decided to leave his jeep and go up the road to photograph the advance Capa was killed when he stepped on a landmine near the road 45 4 155 46 He was 40 at the time of his death He is buried in plot 189 at Amawalk Hill Cemetery also called Friends Cemetery Amawalk Westchester County New York along with his mother Julia and his brother Cornell Capa One of Capa s contact sheets Personal life EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed December 2014 Learn how and when to remove this template message Capa was born into a middle class Jewish family in Budapest 47 where his parents were tailors Capa s mother was a successful fashion shop owner and his father was an employee of her shop 48 Capa had two brothers a younger brother photographer Cornell Capa and an older brother Laszlo Friedmann Cornell moved to Paris in 1936 to join his older brother Capa where he found an interest in photography instead of staying in the field of medicine 49 Not much is known of Capa s older brother Laszlo except that he married Angela Maria Friedmann Csordas in 1933 He died a year later and was buried next to his father in the Kozma Utca Jewish Cemetery 50 At the age of 18 Capa moved to Vienna later relocated to Prague and finally settled in Berlin all cities that were centers of artistic and cultural ferment in this period He started studies in journalism at the German Political College but the Nazi Party instituted restrictions on Jews and banned them from colleges Capa relocated to Paris where he adopted the name Robert Capa in 1934 At that time he had already been a hobby photographer In 1934 Andre Friedman as he still called himself then met Gerda Pohorylle a German Jewish refugee The couple lived in Paris where Andre taught Gerda photography Together they created the name and image of Robert Capa as a famous American photographer and at the beginning of the war both photographers published their work under the pseudonym of Robert Capa 51 Gerda took the name Gerda Taro and became successful in her own right She travelled with Capa to Spain in 1936 intending to document the Spanish Civil War In July 1937 Capa traveled briefly to Paris while Gerda remained in Madrid She was killed near Brunete during a battle Capa who was reportedly engaged to her was deeply shocked and never married In February 1943 Capa met Elaine Justin then married to the actor John Justin citation needed They fell in love and the relationship lasted until the end of the war Capa spent most of his time in the frontline Capa called the redheaded Elaine Pinky and wrote about her in his war memoir Slightly Out of Focus In 1945 Elaine Justin broke up with Capa she later married Chuck Romine Some months later Capa became the lover of the actress Ingrid Bergman who was touring in Europe to entertain American soldiers 52 p 176 In December 1945 Capa followed her to Hollywood The relationship ended in the summer of 1946 when Capa traveled to Turkey 7 Legacy Edit Monument to Robert Capa s death in Normandy France The government of Hungary issued a postage stamp in Capa s honor in 2013 53 That same year it issued a 5 000 forint 20 gold coin also in his honor showing an engraving of Capa 54 His younger brother Cornell Capa also a photographer worked to preserve and promote Robert s legacy as well as develop his own identity and style He founded the International Fund for Concerned Photography in 1966 To give this collection a permanent home he founded the International Center of Photography in New York City in 1974 This was one of the foremost and most extensive conservation efforts on photography to be developed Indeed Capa and his brother believed strongly in the importance of photography and its preservation much like film would later be perceived and duly treated in a similar way The Overseas Press Club created the Robert Capa Gold Medal in the photographer s honor 55 Capa is known for redefining wartime photojournalism His work came from the trenches as opposed to the more arms length perspective that was the precedent He was famed for saying If your photographs aren t good enough you re not close enough 56 He is credited with coining the term Generation X He used it as a title for a photo essay about the young people reaching adulthood immediately after the Second World War It was published in 1953 in Picture Post UK and Holiday USA Capa said We named this unknown generation The Generation X and even in our first enthusiasm we realised that we had something far bigger than our talents and pockets could cope with 57 In 1947 for his work recording World War II in pictures U S general Dwight D Eisenhower awarded Capa the Medal of Freedom Citation 7 20 The International Center of Photography organized a travelling exhibition titled This Is War Robert Capa at Work which displayed Capa s innovations as a photojournalist in the 1930s and 1940s It includes vintage prints contact sheets caption sheets handwritten observations personal letters and original magazine layouts from the Spanish Civil War the Second Sino Japanese War and World War II The exhibition appeared at the Barbican Art Gallery the International Center of Photography of Milan and the Museu Nacional d Art de Catalunya in the fall of 2009 before moving to the Nederlands Fotomuseum from October 10 2009 until January 10 2010 58 In 1976 Capa was posthumously inducted into the International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum 59 A street in Leipzig named after Capa Commemorative plaque for Capa in BudapestPolitics EditAs a young boy Capa was drawn to the Munkakor Employment Circle a group of socialist and avant garde artists photographers and intellectuals centered around Budapest He participated in the demonstrations against the Miklos Horthy regime In 1931 just before his first photo was published Capa was arrested by the Hungarian secret police beaten and jailed for his radical political activity A police official s wife who happened to know his family won Capa s release on the condition that he would leave Hungary immediately 5 The Boston Review has described Capa as a leftist and a democrat he was passionately pro Loyalist and passionately anti fascist During the Spanish Civil War Capa travelled with and photographed the Workers Party of Marxist Unification POUM which resulted in his best known photograph 5 The British magazine Picture Post ran his photos from Spain in the 1930s accompanied by a portrait of Capa in profile with the simple description He is a passionate democrat and he lives to take photographs 5 In popular culture EditIn 2013 the Japanese Female Musical Theater group Takarazuka Revue produced a musical piece based on the life of Capa Ms Ouki Kaname performed the lead role as Capa The group performed the musical in 2012 in Takarazuka and Tokyo and in 2014 in Nagoya In Patrick Modiano s novella Afterimage Capa is a mentor for the subject of the novella Francis Jansen a photographer who retires to Mexico In Alfred Hitchcock s movie Rear Window the protagonist L B Jeff Jefferies James Stewart was partly based on Capa 60 Poet Owen Sheers wrote a poem about Capa named Happy Accidents It can be found in the anthology Skirrid Hill In English indie rock group Alt J s 2012 album An Awesome Wave the love between Capa and Taro and the circumstances of his death are described in the last track Taro The Austrian rock singer Falco wrote the song Kamikaze Cappa in tribute to Capa 61 Collections EditArt Institute of Chicago Chicago IL 62 Metropolitan Museum of Art New York 63 Museum of Modern Art New York 64 Robert Capa The Definitive Collection Magnum Photos 65 Robert Capa International Center of Photography 66 Robert Capa Photographs Worcester Art Museum 67 Robert Capa The J Paul Getty Museum 68 Robert Capa International Photography Hall of Fame 59 Publications EditPublications by Capa Edit The Battle of Waterloo Road New York Random House 1941 OCLC 654774055 Photographs by Capa With text by Diana Forbes Robertson Invasion New York London D Appleton Century 1944 OCLC 1022382 Photographs by Capa With text by Charles Wertenbaker Slightly Out of Focus New York Henry Holt and Company 1947 New York Modern Library 2001 ISBN 9780375753961 Text and photographs by Capa With a foreword by Cornell Capa and an introduction by Richard Whelan A memoir Images of War New York Grossman 1964 Text and photographs by Capa OCLC 284771 With a text by John Steinbeck Robert Capa Photographs New York Aperture 1996 ISBN 978 0893816759 New York Aperture 2004 Heart of Spain Robert Capa s Photographs of the Spanish Civil War New York Aperture 1999 ISBN 9780893818319 New York Aperture 2005 ISBN 978 1931788021 Robert Capa The Definitive Collection London New York Phaidon 2001 ISBN 9780714840673 London New York Phaidon 2004 ISBN 978 0714844497 Edited by Richard Whelan Robert Capa at Work This is War Gottingen Steidl 2009 ISBN 9783865219442 Photographs by Capa With a foreword by Willis E Hartshorn an introduction by Christopher Phillips and text by Richard Whelan Published to accompany an exhibition at the International Center of Photography New York September 2007 January 2008 A detailed examination of six of Robert Capa s most important war reportages from the first half of his career the Falling Soldier 1936 Chinese resistance to the Japanese invasion 1938 the end of the Spanish Civil War in Catalonia 1938 39 D Day the US paratroop invasion of Germany and the liberation of Leipzig 1945 69 Questa e la Guerra Robert Capa al Lavoro Italy Contrasto 2009 ISBN 9788869651601 Published to accompany an exhibition in Milan March June 2009 70 Publications with others Edit Death in the Making New York Covici Friede 1938 Photographs by Capa and Taro A Russian Journal New York Viking 1948 Text by John Steinbeck illustrated with photographs by Capa Report on Israel New York Simon amp Schuster 1950 By Irwin Shaw and Capa Publications about Capa Edit Robert Capa a Biography New York Knopf 1985 By Richard Whelan ISBN 0 394 52488 8 Blood and Champagne The Life and Times of Robert Capa Macmillan 2002 Thomas Dunne 2003 ISBN 978 0312315641 Da Capo Press 2004 ISBN 978 0306813566 By Alex Kershaw La foto de Capa Cordoba Paso de Cebra Ediciones 2011 A fictionalised account of the discovery of the exact location of the Falling Soldier photograph ISBN 978 84 939103 0 3 Nizza oder die Liebe zur Kunst Bad Konig Vantage Point World 2013 By Axel Dielmann ISBN 978 3 981 53549 5 Text in German Notes Edit The authenticity of the photograph is today in doubt with some questioning its location the identity of its subject and the discovery of staged photographs taken at the same time and place 10 11 References Edit a b Capa Robert Archived from the original on October 6 2011 Retrieved February 18 2009 a b c Kershaw Alex Blood and Champagne The Life and Times of Robert Capa Macmillan 2002 ISBN 978 0306813566 Hudson Berkley 2009 Sterling Christopher H ed Encyclopedia of Journalism Thousand Oaks Calif SAGE pp 1060 67 ISBN 978 0 7619 2957 4 a b c d e f g h Davenport Alma The History of Photography An Overview Univ of New Mexico Press 1991 a b c d Linfield Boston Review Archived from the original on November 6 2011 Retrieved August 29 2010 Photo of Gerda Taro zakhor online com Retrieved April 1 2018 a b c d e Robert Capa s Longest Day Vanity Fair June 2014 New Works by Photography s Old Masters New York Times April 30 2009 Ingledew John Photography Laurence King Publishing 2005 p 184 Richard Whelan Proving that Robert Capa s Falling Soldier is Genuine a Detective Story American Masters PBS Website PBS Iconic Capa war photo was stage newspaper Archived July 20 2009 at the Wayback Machine AFP Photo of Capa far left with Hemingway far right in Spain wordpress com Retrieved April 1 2018 Life Documents Hemingway s New Novel with War Shots Life magazine January 6 1941 The212BERLIN August 4 2011 The Mexican Suitcase trailer Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved April 1 2018 via YouTube The Capa Cache New York Times January 27 2008 The Mexican Suitcase Rediscovered Spanish Civil War Negatives by Capa Chim and Taro Archived February 11 2021 at the Wayback Machine International Center of Photography Photo of the Spanish Civil War icp org Retrieved April 1 2018 The Fascinating Story of The Mexican Suitcase Archived December 1 2017 at the Wayback Machine ORMS Meet the DocuWeeks Filmmakers Trisha Ziff The Mexican Suitcase Documentary No August 2011 International Documentary Association Retrieved January 16 2016 a b George Stevens Jr Robert Capa A Photographer at War Washington Post September 29 1985 Stephen R MacKinnon includes photographs by Robert Capa in Wuhan 1938 War Refugees and the Making of Modern China Berkeley University of California Press 2008 Capa photos of the Chinese resistance Life May 23 1938 Brenner Marie War Photographer Robert Capa and his Coverage of D day Vanity Fair Retrieved November 21 2017 Slightly Out of Focus Henry Holt and Company New York 1947 p 104 Photo by Capa on D Day pinimg com Retrieved April 1 2018 D Day National WWII Museum Jay December 2 2012 The Reel Foto Robert Capa 20th Century War Photographer reelfoto blogspot com Retrieved April 1 2018 a b c d e f Coleman A D February 12 2019 Alternate History Robert Capa on D Day exposure magazine Society for Photographic Education Retrieved February 18 2019 Simon Kuper Interview John Morris on his friend Robert Capa Financial Times May 31 2013 Retrieved June 1 2013 Estrin James December 6 2016 As He Turns 100 John Morris Recalls a Century in Photojournalism Lens Blog New York Times Retrieved February 18 2019 Life magazine story with Capa s images slightly out of focus com Archived from the original on September 30 2015 Retrieved April 1 2018 Lt jg H L Blackwell Jr Report on Naval Combat Demolition Units NCDUs In Operation Neptune as part of Task Force 122 5 July 1944 19 February 2019 Match Paris 2014 L ete de la memoire La veritable histoire de la tondue de Chartres parismatch com Bowman Raymond J tracesofwar com Retrieved April 23 2016 a b c d e f Railsback Brian E Meyer Michael J A John Steinbeck Encyclopedia Greenwood Publishing Group 2006 p 50 Photo of John Steinbeck and Robert Capa boarding a plane for the USSR 1947 phaidon com Retrieved April 1 2018 Photo of Stalingrad taken by Capa Archived from the original on October 28 2016 Retrieved October 28 2016 Photo of Tiflis Georgia 1947 pinimg com Retrieved April 1 2018 Photo of Georgian farmworkers agenda ge Archived from the original on October 28 2016 Retrieved April 1 2018 Photo of Capa and Steinbeck pinimg com Retrieved April 1 2018 Robert Capa s Road to Jerusalem Jewish Review of Books Winter 2016 Robert Capa Remembered Independent UK October 12 1996 Photo of Capa John Huston and Burl Ives pinimg com Retrieved April 1 2018 Robert Capa Photo Gallery gettyimages com Retrieved April 1 2018 Aronson Marc Budhos Marina 2017 Eyes of the World Robert Capa Gerda Taro and the Invention of Modern Photojournalism Macmillan Publishing Group LLC ISBN 9780805098358 Badenbroek Michael Robert Capa war photographer army photographer com Archived from the original on May 4 2016 Retrieved April 28 2016 Robert Capa Archived April 25 2012 at the Wayback Machine Jewish History Hungary Robert Capa Cornell Capa January 24 2019 Lazslo Friedmann geni family tree Gerda Taro Robert Capa y los peligros de firmar con un seudonimo masculino eldiario es in Spanish Retrieved January 23 2018 Marton Kati 2006 The Great Escape Nine Jews Who Fled Hitler and Changed the World New York Simon amp Schuster ISBN 978 0 7432 6115 9 LCCN 2006049162 OCLC 70864519 Magyar Posta Ltd 2013 Magyar Posta Zrt Retrieved December 3 2018 Photo of Hungarian gold coin dedicated to Capa coin currency com Retrieved April 1 2018 Overseas Press Club of America Awards Archive Archived from the original on November 5 2007 Robert Capa Magnum Photos Archived from the original on April 15 2012 Ulrich John November 1 2003 Introduction A Sub cultural Genealogy In Andrea L Harris ed GenXegesis Essays on Alternative Youth p 3 ISBN 9780879728625 Travelling exhibitions This Is War Robert Capa at Work Archived May 4 2009 at the Wayback Machine International Center of Photography a b Robert Capa International Photography Hall of Fame Retrieved February 20 2020 Belton John 2000 Alfred Hitchcock s Rear Window PDF Cambridge United Kingdom Cambridge University Press p 5 ISBN 0 521 56423 9 Rock Me Falco www metafilter com Retrieved November 21 2017 Robert Capa The Art Institute of Chicago Robert Capa The Falling Soldier The Metropolitan Museum of Art Robert Capa Death of a Loyalist Militiaman Cordoba front Spain Late August early September 1936 MoMA Robert Capa The Definitive Collection Magnum Photos Retrieved February 20 2020 Robert Capa International Center of Photography Retrieved February 20 2020 Robert Capa Photographs Worcester Art Museum Retrieved February 20 2020 Robert Capa The J Paul Getty Museum Retrieved February 20 2020 Capa Robert Whelan Richard International Center of Photography April 1 2018 Robert Capa at work this is war Steidl Thames amp Hudson distributor OCLC 755099561 Whelan Richard International Center of Photography April 1 2018 Questa e la Guerra Robert Capa al lavoro International Center of Photography Two Contrast OCLC 772645394 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Robert Capa Wikimedia Commons has media related to Robert Capa Capa s Photography Portfolio Magnum Photos PBS biography and analysis of Falling Soldier authenticity Discussion on the authenticity of Capa s Fallen Republican Soldier Does it matter if it was faked Robert Capa s Lost Negatives Photography Temple Photographer Robert Capa The woman who captured Robert Capa s heart The Independent 2010 Driven to Shoot on the Frontlines The Japan Times 2014 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Robert Capa amp oldid 1147820109, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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