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Arguably the greatest, bravest and most influential war photographer of the 20th century, Hungarian-born Robert Capa gets a respectful and respectable bio treatment in Anne Makepeace's well ...
Over the course of the 20th century, the romanticized notion of the war photographer was captured in popular culture as a sort-of 'Indiana Jones with a Camera' in novels and film. Robert Capa ...
Robert Capa was a Hungarian war photographer and photo journalist, arguably the greatest combat and adventure photographer in history. He changed war photography forever by insisting that good ...
The Spanish Civil War gave rise to modern war photography ... can be said to have hailed the arrival of the genre it was Robert Capa. The Hungarian photographer was killed when he stepped on ...
By Justin Jones. This year marks the 100th birthday of Hungarian-born photojournalist Robert Capa, who captured almost every major war during the first half of the 20th century. The fearless Capa ...
The photographer Robert Capa took one of the most enduring images of war—the Allies’ D-Day landing at Omaha Beach during World War II—and created an enduring legacy by co-founding the agency ...
So the images you see in this video corresponding to World War II or post-war Europe are exclusively Robert Capa's. But what about before that? Who captured the definitive moment with their camera?
Yet for Robert Capa, born in Budapest in 1913 and now an American citizen, that courage must be found because war cannot be documented from too far away. If you want the perfect photo you have to ...
War photographer Robert Capa was alongside the Allies storming the beaches of Normandy during WWII. He made it out—but the images he captured nearly didn’t. An American soldier crawls in the ...
Robert Capa: Photographs.New York: Aperture, 1996. Heart of Spain: Robert Capa’s Photographs of the Spanish Civil War.Catalogue ofan exhibition organized by the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte ...
Born Andre Friedman in Budapest, Hungary, photojournalist Robert Capa (1913-1954) was sent to Spain in 1936 to cover the civil war and succeeded in producing many of the conflict's most iconic images.