His biographer called them the most gruesome photographs of Robert Capa’s career. In a Leipzig flat, a young soldier lay dead from a sniper.
Tag: Robert Capa
The Men Behind ‘Henri Cartier-Bresson’ Curtain
Sometime in 1934, just after Hitler had come to power, three great photographers met in […]
L’Épuration | Robert Capa
Iconic Photos reports from a wonderful exhibition in Musée du Quai Branly On Sunday, as rain […]
To Those We Lost
Fifty-seven years ago today died one of the first and brightest stars of photojournalism — […]
Trotsky in Copenhagen
In November 1932, Robert Capa was just a darkroom boy working at Dephot (a famous […]
D-Day by Robert Capa, 1944 | Contact Sheets
Robert Capa was the only press photographer who managed to go in with the first wave of infantry on the morning of June 6, 1944 on D.Day. Here are his photos.
The Death of A Loyalist Militiaman
The Falling Soldier by Robert Capa was taken on September 5, 1936 and depicted the death of a Republican soldier during the Battle of Cerro Muriano in the Spanish Civil War.