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A few years ago, Clay Mountcastle’s father, Jack, a Vietnam veteran, showed him a copy of a 1966 issue of Life Magazine — a once wildly popular weekly publication — ...
Capa's tumultuous and all-too-brief life symbolizes the cosmopolitan and tragic Central European milieu of Budapest Jewry in the 20th century. Born Endre Ernő Friedmann to a Jewish family in the ...
Justice has been done in recent years, and both Capa and Taro are credited with many crucial snapshots. Gerard Taro died in El Escorial in 1937, while working on photographing the Spanish Civil War.
Still, those famous words are the ethos of the Close-up Photographer of the Year (CUPOTY) competition. Now in its sixth year, the competition celebrates the images that showcase the very best in close ...
Moroccan goumiers of the French Union Army before leaving Lang Son to reinforce the Dong Khe forces during the French-Indochina War, September 1950 (AFP). This year marks the 70th anniversary of the ...
The harrowing story of the photo that defined D-Day—and how it was almost lost. War photographer Robert Capa was alongside the Allies storming the beaches of Normandy during WWII.
However, Capa is most well known for his work in the Spanish Civil War. It should be noted that Robert Capa was a pseudonym adopted in 1936 – Capa’s birth name was Endré Ernö Friedmann.
Robert Capa the Photojournalist, the world's first permanent exhibition of Robert Capa's work, opened on 13 June in the new 500 sqm exhibition space. ... and died stepping on a landmine in the ...
Named The Capa Space, after famed war photographer Robert Capa, the museum stands on the grounds of a Quaker Meeting house adjacent to a bucolic cemetery in Yorktown Heights. Members of the Capa ...