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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.
This was the motto of photojournalist Robert Capa, and his photographs showed just how much he lived by that motto. His wartime images — from the Spanish Civil War of 1936-1939 to the 1954 ...
A soldier crawls in the surf. War craft looms in the sea behind him. The image is blurry, mirroring the chaotic motion of the real-life scene: D-Day. Robert Capa’s iconic photograph of a soldier ...
Rarely seen color photographs by Robert Capa, the legendary Hungarian photographer best known for his battlefield pictures from the Spanish Civil War and D-Day, are being shown for the first time ...
Marking what would have been the 100th birthday of Robert Capa, the 20th Century’s most famous war photographer, ATLAS Gallery has curated a diverse exhibition which celebrates his life and work.
<p>Updated: April 30, 2009</p> <p>Robert Capa (1913-1954) was a pioneering war photographer and one of the founders of the Magnum photo agency. He was considered by many the quintessential ...
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.
Lynsey Addario began taking war pictures when the United States invaded Afghanistan in 2001. Only two-thirds of a century had elapsed since Robert Capa documented the Spanish Civil War.
Capa never said the photo was taken at Cerra Muriano — not once, not anywhere.” (Read: “The Fight over Franco’s Palace.”) ...
Robert Capa, the war photographer who died stepping on a land mine in Indochina, will share the spotlight with architect Le Corbusier and choreographer Mark Morris in the London Barbican Centre’s 2008 ...
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