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"If you photographs aren't good enough, you are not close enough"
-Robert Capa
-Robert Capa
...if you haven't walked a mile in his shoes...
Robert Capa set the stage for conflict photography.
As to getting close Nachtwey was not much of one for telephoto lenses as the second image also shows.
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There is even a Robert Capa photo-journalism award.
When I was working I had the occasion to meet with Jim Nachtwey as a fellow NPPA member. At the time he was working at the Journal in Albuquerque. One of his balloon fest images from that time is below. If not retired would think he is at least semi. He won the Capa award multiple times.
Not sure whom is the favorite young / upcoming conflict photographer.
As to getting close Nachtwey was not much of one for telephoto lenses as the second image also shows.
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Or maybe you screwed up your shutter speed and blamed it on a lab tech.
Or maybe - not judging at all - you got yourself into the most hellish situation in history and understandably panicked and didn't get the shot off because you had a million bullets flying in your direction and then blamed it on the lab tech.
Capa didn't blame it on the lab tech. He learned while in France what had happened to the negs because of the darkroom assistant's mistake. His own account:
"Seven days later, I learned that the pictures I had taken on ‘Easy Red’ were the best of the invasion. But the excited darkroom assistant, while drying the negatives, had turned on too much heat and the emulsions had melted and run down before the eyes of the London office. Out of one hundred and six pictures in all, only eight, were salvaged. The captions under the heat-blurred pictures read that Capa’s hands were badly shaking."
He did not panic, He took over a hundred pictures. And yes, he had no problem admitting that he was scared to death. You can read the whole account here:
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D-Day and the Omaha Beach landings • Robert Capa • Magnum Photos Magnum Photos
The only photographer landing with the first wave on Omaha Beach, Robert Capa’s iconic photographs provide a unique documentation of the eventwww.magnumphotos.com
Capa didn't blame it on the lab tech. He learned while in France what had happened to the negs because of the darkroom assistant's mistake. His own account:
"Seven days later, I learned that the pictures I had taken on ‘Easy Red’ were the best of the invasion. But the excited darkroom assistant, while drying the negatives, had turned on too much heat and the emulsions had melted and run down before the eyes of the London office. Out of one hundred and six pictures in all, only eight, were salvaged. The captions under the heat-blurred pictures read that Capa’s hands were badly shaking."
He did not panic, He took over a hundred pictures. And yes, he had no problem admitting that he was scared to death. You can read the whole account here:
![]()
D-Day and the Omaha Beach landings • Robert Capa • Magnum Photos Magnum Photos
The only photographer landing with the first wave on Omaha Beach, Robert Capa’s iconic photographs provide a unique documentation of the eventwww.magnumphotos.com
This version has been debunked many times. I'm not going to charge out and show sources.
However, in all your time in a dark room have you ever melted an emulsion? Is it even possible? I've tried, on modern and ancient emulsions. I've not been able to. And after such a harrowing shoot why would you trust sending them off in a bundle? Every single navel vessel had a darkroom capable of everything needed for processing. The story doesn't pan out under scrutiny.
Did he really go in with "the first wave" at Omaha.?
If so, it is amazing he was not wounded....at least.
There's debate about that. Check the link on my post above.
Don't know about "many times", just aware of one pretty interesting investigation.
Source: https://petapixel.com/2019/02/16/debunking-the-myths-of-robert-capa-on-d-day/
Until ICP opens up the archives, we're stuck with the two versions.
I'll remain fully skeptical of the official story. Like we say in the current day 'Let's see the negatives'
Although psychologically and morally Jimmy Stewart's character has nothing to do with Capa's real personality, the way this story unfolded back then reminds me of that great quote at the end of John Ford's The Man Who Shot Liberty Valence:
"This is the West, Sir. When the legend becomes fact, print the legend."
All this controversy. But the simple fact is that these were the best war pictures ever made.
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