Robert Capa

Camera Department

Popular As Endre Friedman

Birthday October 22, 1913

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Budapest, Austria-Hungary

DEATH DATE 1954-5-25, Thái Bình Province, French Indochina (40 years old)

Nationality Hungary

#16856 Most Popular

1913

Robert Capa (born Endre Ernő Friedmann; 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.

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.

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.

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).

At the age of 18, he was accused of alleged communist sympathies and was forced to flee Hungary.

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.

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.

1932

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

After moving to Paris, he became professionally involved with Gerta Pohorylle, later known as Gerda Taro, a German-Jewish photographer who had moved to Paris for the same reasons he did.

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.

1936

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

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 and Picture Post.

The authenticity of the photo was later questioned, with evidence including other photos from the scene suggesting it was staged.

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."

1937

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.

1938

In 1938, he traveled to the Chinese city of Hankou, now within Wuhan, to document the resistance to the Japanese invasion.

He sent his images to Life magazine, which published some of them in its May 23, 1938, issue.

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.

1940

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).

Life magazine published an article about Hemingway and his time in Spain, along with numerous photos by Capa.

1947

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.

He was killed when he stepped on a landmine in Vietnam.

1948

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.

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.

2007

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.

2011

In 2011, Trisha Ziff directed a film about those images, entitled The Mexican Suitcase.