|
10 Photographs That Changed the World
Photography can take us places, we’ve never been before, perhaps
never dreamed of. There are some photographs that will make you stop and
think. These 10 photographs stopped the world and people hold their
breaths for a few seconds to take it all in.
The Photograph That Raised the Photojournalistic Stakes: “Omaha Beach, Normandy, France” Robert Capa, 1944

“If your pictures aren’t good enough,” war photographer Robert Capa
used to say, “you aren’t close enough.” Words to die by, yes, but the
man knew of what he spoke. After all, his most memorable shots were
taken on the morning of D-Day, June 6, 1944, when he landed alongside
the first waves of infantry at Omaha Beach.
Caught under heavy
fire, Capa dove for what little cover he could find, then shot all the
film in his camera, and got out – just barely. He escaped with his life,
but not much else. Of the four rolls of film Capa took of the horrific
D-Day battle, all but 11 exposures were ruined by an overeager lab
assistant, who melted the film in his rush to develop it. (He was trying
to meet the deadline for the next issue of Life magazine.)
In an
ironic twist, however, that same mistake gave the few surviving
exposures their famously surreal look (”slightly out of focus,” Life
incorrectly explained upon printing them). More than 50 years later,
director Steven Spielberg would go to great lengths to reproduce the
look of that “error” for his harrowing D-Day landing sequence in “Saving
Private Ryan,” even stripping the coating from his camera lenses to
echo Capa’s notorious shots.
The Photograph That Gave a Face to the Great Depression “Migrant Mother” Dorothea Lange, 1936

As era-defining photographs go, “Migrant Mother” pretty much takes
the cake. For many, Florence Owens Thompson is the face of the Great
Depression, thanks to legendary educated and apprenticed photojournalist
Dorothea Lange. Lange captured the image while visiting a dusty
California pea-pickers’ camp in February 1936, and in doing so, captured
the resilience of a proud nation facing desperate times.
Unbelievably,
Thompson’s story is as compelling as her portrait. Just 32 years old
when Lange approached her (”as if drawn by a magnet,” Lange said).
Thompson was a mother of seven who’d lost her husband to tuberculosis.
Stranded at a migratory labor farm in Nipomo, Calif. her family
sustained themselves on birds killed by her kids and vegetables taken
from a nearby field – as meager a living as any earned by the other
2,500 workers there. The photo’s impact was staggering. Reproduced in
newspapers everywhere, Thompson’s haunted face triggered an immediate
public outcry, quickly prompting politicos from the federal Resettlement
Administration to send food and supplies. Sadly, however, Thompson and
her family had already moved on, receiving nary a wedge of government
cheese for their high-profile misery. In fact, no one knew the identity
of the photographed woman until Thompson revealed herself years later in
a 1976 newspaper article.
The Photograph That Brought the Battlefield Home “Federal Dead on the Field of Battle of First Day, Gettysburg, Pennsylvania” Mathew Brady, 1863

As one of the world’s first war photographers, Mathew Brady didn’t start out
having as action-packed a career as you might think. A successful
daguerreotypist and a distinguished gentleman, Brady was known for his
portraits of notable people such as Abraham Lincoln and Robert E. Lee.
In other words, he was hardly a photojournalist in the trenches.
In
fact, Brady had everything to lose by making a career move – his money,
his business, and quite possibly his life. Nevertheless, he decided to
risk it all and follow the Union Army into battle with his camera,
saying, “A spirit in my feet said, ‘Go!’” And go he did – at least until
he got a good look at the pointy end of a Confederate bayonet.
After
narrowly escaping capture at the first Battle of Bull Run, Brady’s
chatty feet quieted down a bit, and he began sending assistants in his
place. In the span of only a few years, Brady and his team shot more
than 7,000 photographs – an astounding number when you consider that
developing a single plate required a horse-drawn-wagon-full of
cumbersome equipment and noxious chemicals. Not exactly what you’d call
“point-and-shoot.”
Tethered as he was to his equine-powered
darkroom and with film speeds being much slower then, Brady produced war
photos that are understandably light on the action and heavy on the
aftermath. Still, they mark the first time Americans were so immediately
confronted with the grim realities of the battlefield.
The Photograph That Ended a War But Ruined a Life “Murder of a Vietcong by Saigon Police Chief” Eddie Adams, 1968

“Still photographs are the most powerful weapon in the world,” AP
photojournalist Eddie Adams once wrote. A fitting quote for Adams,
because his 1968 photograph of an officer shooting a handcuffed prisoner
in the head at point-blank range not only earned him a Pulitzer Prize
in 1969, but also went a long way toward souring Americans’ attitudes
about the Vietnam War.
For all the image’s political impact,
though, the situation wasn’t as black-and-white as it’s rendered. What
Adams’ photograph doesn’t reveal is that the man being shot was the
captain of a Vietcong “revenge squad” that had executed dozens of
unarmed civilians earlier the same day. Regardless, it instantly became
an icon of the war’s savagery and made the official pulling the trigger –
General Nguyen Ngoc Loan – its iconic villain.
Sadly, the
photograph’s legacy would haunt Loan for the rest of his life. Following
the war, he was reviled where ever he went. After an Australian VA
hospital refused to treat him, he was transferred to the United States,
where he was met with a massive (though unsuccessful) campaign to deport
him. He eventually settled in Virginia and opened a restaurant but was
forced to close it down as soon as his past caught up with him. Vandals
scrawled “we know who you are” on his walls, and business dried up.
Adams
felt so bad for Loan that he apologized for having taken the photo at
all, admitting, “The general killed the Vietcong; I killed the general
with my camera.”
The Photograph That Isn’t as Romantic as You Might Think “V-J Day, Times Square, 1945″, a.k.a. “The Kiss”Alfred Eisenstaedt, 1945

On August 14, 1945, the news of Japan’s surrender was announced in
the United States, signaling the end of World War II. Riotous
celebrations erupted in the streets, but perhaps none were more relieved
than those in uniform. Although many of them had recently returned from
victory in Europe, they faced the prospect of having to ship out yet again, this time to the bloody Pacific.
Among
the overjoyed masses gathered in Times Square that day was one of the
most talented photojournalists of the 20th century, a German immigrant
named Alfred Eisenstaedt. While snapping pictures of the celebration, he
spotted a sailor “running along the street grabbing any and every girl
in sight.” He later explained that, “whether she was a grandmother,
stout, thin, old, didn’t make any difference.”
Of course, a photo
of the sailor planting a wet one on a senior citizen wouldn’t have made
the cover of Life, but when he locked lips with an attractive nurse,
the image was circulated in newspapers across the country. Needless to
say, “V-J Day” didn’t capture a highly anticipated embrace by long-lost
lovers, but it also wasn’t staged, as many critics have claimed. In any
case, the image remains an enduring symbol of America’s exuberance at
the end of a long struggle.
The Photograph That Destroyed an Industry “Hindenburg” Murray Becker, 1937

Forget the Titanic, the Lusitania, and the comparatively unphotogenic
accident at Chernobyl. Thanks to the power of images, the explosion of
the Hindenburg on May 6, 1937, claims the dubious honor of being the
quintessential disaster of the 20th century.
In the grand scheme
of things, however, the Hindenburg wasn’t all that disastrous. Of the 97
people aboard, a surprising 62 survived. (in fact, it wasn’t even the
worst Zeppelin crash of the 20th century. Just four years earlier, the
U.S.S. Akron had crashed into the Atlantic killing more than twice as
many people.) But when calculating the epic status of a catastrophe,
terrifying photographs and quotable quotes (”Oh, the humanity!”) far
outweigh body counts.
Assembled as part of a massive PR campaign
by the Hindenburg’s parent company in Germany, no fewer than 22
photographers, reporters, and newsreel cameramen were on the scene in
Lakehurst, N.J. when the airship went down. Worldwide publicity of the
well-documented disaster shattered the public’s faith in Zeppelins,
which were, at the time, considered the safest mode of air travel
available.
During the 1920s and 1930s, Zeppelins had operated
regular flights, totting civilians back and forth between Germany and
the Americas. But all of that stopped in 1937. The incident effectively
killed the use of dirigibles as a commercially viable mode of passenger
transport, ending the golden age of the airship not with a whimper, but
with a horrific bang that was photographed and then syndicated around
the globe.
The Photograph That Saved the Planet “The Tetons – Snake River” Ansel Adams, 1942

Some claim photography can be divided into two eras: Before Adams and
After Adams. In Times B.A., for instance, photography wasn’t widely
considered an art form. Rather, photographers attempted to make their
pictures more “artistic” (i.e., more like paintings) by subjecting their
exposures to all sorts of extreme manipulations, from coating their
lenses with petroleum jelly to scratching the surfaces of their
negatives with needles. Then came Ansel Adams, helping shutterbugs
everywhere get over their collective inferiority complex.
Brashly
declaring photography to be “a blazing poetry of the real,” Adams
eschewed manipulations, claiming they were simply derivative of other
art forms. Instead, he preached the value of “pure photography.” In an
era when handheld point-and-shoot cameras were quickly becoming the
norm, Adams and other landscape photographers clung to their bulky,
old-fashioned large-format cameras. Ultimately, Adams’ pictures turned
photography into fine art. What’s more, they shaped the way Americans
thought of their nation’s wilderness and, with that, how to preserve it.
Adams’
passion for the land wasn’t limited to vistas he framed through the
lens. In 1936, he accompanied his photos to Washington to lobby for the
preservation of the Kings Canyon area in California. Sure enough, he was
successful, and it was declared a national park.
The Photograph That Kept Che Alive “The Corpse of Che Guevara” Freddy Alborta, 1967

Sociopathic thug? Socialist luminary? Or as existentialist Jean-Paul
Sartre called him, “the most complete human being of our age”? Whatever
you believe, there’s no denying that Ernesto “Che” Guevara has become
the patron saint of revolutionaries. Undeniably, he is a man of mythical
status – a reputation that persists less because of how he lived than
because of how he died.
Unenthused by his efforts to incite
revolution among the poor and oppressed in Bolivia, the nation’s army
(trained and equipped by the U.S. military and the CIA) captured and
executed Guevara in 1967. But before dumping his body in a secret grave,
they gathered around for a strategic photo op. They wanted to prove to
the world that Che was dead, in hopes that his political movement would
die with him. in fact, anticipating charges that the photo had been
faked, Che’s thoughtful captors amputated his hands and preserved them
in formaldehyde.
But by killing the man, Bolivian officials
unwittingly birthed his legend. The photo, which circulated around the
world, bore a striking resemblance to Renaissance paintings of Christ
taken down from the cross. Even as Che’s killers preened and gloated
above him (the officer on the right seems to be inadvertently pointing
to a wound on Guevara’s body near where Christ’s final wound was
inflicted), Che’s eerily peaceful face was described as showing
forgiveness. The photo’s allegorical significance certainly wasn’t lost
on the revolutionary protesters of the era. They quickly adopted “Che
lives!” as a slogan and rallying cry. Thanks to this photograph, “the
passion of the Che” ensured that he would live on forever as a martyr
for the socialist cause.
The Photograph that Allowed Geniuses to Have a Sense of Humor “Einstein with his Tongue Out” Arthur Sasse, 1951

You may appreciate this memorable portrait as much as the next
fellow, but it’s still fair to wonder: “Did it really change history?”
Rest assured, we think it did. While Einstein certainly changed history
with his contributions to nuclear physics and quantum mechanics, this
photo changed the way history looked at Einstein. By humanizing a man
known chiefly for his brilliance, this image is the reason Einstein’s
name has become synonymous not only with “genius,” but also with “wacky
genius.”
So why the history-making tongue? It seems Professor
Einstein, hoping to enjoy his 72nd birthday in peace, was stuck on the
Princeton campus enduring incessant hounding by the press. Upon being
prodded to smile for the camera for what seemed like the millionth time,
he gave photographer Arthur Sasse a good look at his uvula instead.
This being no ordinary tongue, the resulting photo became an instant
classic, thus ensuring that the distinguished Nobel Prize-winner would
be remembered as much for his personality as for his brain.
The Photograph That Made the Surreal Real “Dalí Atomicus” Philippe Halsman, 1948

Philippe Halsman is quite possibly the only photographer to have made
a career out of taking portraits of people jumping. But he claimed the
act of leaping revealed his subjects’ true selves, and looking at his
most famous jump, “Dalí Atomicus,” it’s pretty hard to disagree.
The
photograph is Halsman’s homage both to the new atomic age (prompted by
physicist’ then-recent announcement that all matter hangs in a constant
state of suspension) and to Dalí’s surrealist masterpiece “Leda Atomica”
(seen on the right, behind the cats, and unfinished at the time). It
took six hours, 28 jumps, and a roomful of assistants throwing angry
cats and buckets of water into the air to get the perfect exposure.
But
before settling on the “Atomicus” we know today, Halsman rejected a
number of other concepts for the shot. One was the idea of throwing milk
instead of water, but that was abandoned for fear that viewers, fresh
from the privations of World War II, would condemn it as a waste of
milk. Another involved exploding a cat in order to capture it “in
suspension,” though that arguably would have been a waste of cats.
Halsman’s
methods were as unique as they were effective. His celebrity “jump”
portraits appeared on at least seven Life magazine covers and helped
usher in a new – and radically more adventurous – era of portrait
photography.
educated and apprenticed photojournalist
|