"Concerned photographer". An exhibition reviews the expanded work by Cornell Capa, Founding Director of ICP and recently passed away
Cornell Capa
[Political dissidents arrested after the assassination of Nicaraguan dictator, Anastasio Somoza, Managua], 1956
© Cornell Capa/Magnum
Idioma: English
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Cornell Capa (1918–2008) chose the phrase "concerned photographer" to
describe those photographers who demonstrated in their work a
humanitarian impulse to use pictures to educate and change the world,
not just to record it. During a long and distinguished career as a
photographer, Capa worked for Life magazine from 1946 to
1967, and for the Magnum Photos agency beginning in 1954, covering
social and political issues in the United States, as well as England,
the Soviet Union, Israel, and Central and South America.
While he
created some iconic individual images, Capa more fully established his
own specific areas of concern regarding politics and social issues with
incisive and important photo-essays. Included in the show are his
stories on the reform government of President Arbenz in Guatemala
(1953); the collapse of Juan Perón's dictatorial regime in Argentina
(1955); political dissidents arrested after the assassination of
Nicaraguan dictator, Anastasio Somoza (1956); the work of missionaries
in Ecuador (1956–58); the plight of indigenous tribes in the north-east
of Peru (1961); a significant reportage on conditions at Attica (1972)
following the bloody prison uprising; the 1964 senate race of Robert
Kennedy; and an analysis of poverty and population in El Salvador and
Honduras (1970–73). This exhibition looks at these pioneering stories
through vintage photographs, magazine spreads, and letters, and will
serve as a tribute to Capa as photographer and Founding Director of ICP.