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Robert Capa and The Falling Soldier
Posted by Mark Sinclair, 23 October 2008, 11:47 Permalink Comments (5)
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="440" caption="Robert Capa, Death of a Loyalist militiaman, Cerro Muriano, Spain, Sept. 5, 1936"]
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In early September 1936, with the Spanish Civil War less than two months old, a 22 year-old Robert Capa took a photograph that was to become a symbol of the Republican struggle against General Franco's fascist insurgents. The story of the iconic image that both made and, years later, challenged Capa's reputation as a war photographer, is just one strand of his life explored in a timely new show at the Barbican in London.
The Spanish Civil War broke out on July 19 1936 and in early August, Robert Capa and his photographer companion (and lover) Gerda Taro arrived in Spain to cover the events. In September, Capa and Taroíarrived in the village of Cerro Muriano near Círdoba where Republican militiamen were mouting an offensive against the fascists. Here the pair produced a series of images showing a small band of militiamen posing on a hillside, holding their rifles up defiantly and running across ridges and gulleys.
As Capa was watching one of the soldiers (later identified as Federico Borrell García) a stray bullet struck and killed the militiaman right in front of his camera. Two weeks later, Capa's striking image, alongside another shot taken on the same hillside, appeared in the French magazine, Vu, in an emotive photo-essay that aimed to bring the Republican's struggle to a wider audience.
What Capa could not have guessed at the time, however, was how the authenticity of his image would later be questioned, largely because it had so little information attached to it. Was it staged in order to make a definitive image of the Republican struggle? Was the soldier actually killed? And why does he occupy an almost identical position to another soldier, felled seemingly moments later?
In This Is War! Robert Capa at Work, one of three shows at the Barbican dedicated to the representation of conflict, the curators have done a great job in sourcing the printed examples of where Capa's famous image of "The Falling Soldier" was used.
Bizarrely, it seems that in Capa's own use of the image for a cover for one of his books (see below), he may have inadvertantly implied that this powerful photograph wasn't a true depiction of the day.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="550" caption="Vu magazine spread, September 23, 1936"]
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The first use of Death of a Loyalist militiaman was in Vu magazine, published 18 days after Capa took the photograph. The pages (above) are titled How They Fell (left) and How They Fled. The caption to the image that became commonly known as The Falling Soldier, reads: "With lively step, breasting the wind, clenching their rifles, they ran down the slope covered with thick stubble. Suddenly their soaring was interrupted, a bullet whistled - a fratricidal bullet - and their blood was drunk by their native soil." The captions on the right-hand page, to the images of refugees fleeing the Nationalist bombing of Cerro Murian (where The Falling Soldier image was taken) are written in a similarly poetic language.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="550" caption="Regards magazine, September 24, 1936"]
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The day after the issue of Vu appeared, Regards magazine published five images (above) that are now known to have been made in Cerro Muriano around the time that Capa photographed The Falling Soldier (they are captioned as being from the Círdoba front).
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="550" caption="LIFE magazine spread, July 12, 1937"]
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Marking the first anniversary of the civil war in Spain, LIFE magazine again used The Falling Soldier in a series of images by Capa. This issue of LIFE is often mistakenly credited as being the first publication where the image appeared. The caption, too, is a little misleading. It reads: "Robert Capa's camera catches a Spanish soldier the instant he is dropped by a bullet through the head in front of Círdoba". The assertion that the militiaman had been shot through the head was likely supplied by a LIFE editor who mistook the tassel on the man's cap for a piece of his skull.
The advert on the left, for Vitalis hair protector, also offers up an interesting (if perhaps ill-placed) juxtaposition.
[caption id="" align="alignnone" width="550" caption="Death in the Making book cover, 1938"]
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This book cover (above) for Capa and Taro's tribute to the sacrifices made by the Spanish while fighting for their freedom appeared the following year. Ironically, it may have contributed to the theories that Capa had staged the image, simply because it only appeared on the dust jacket and not inside the book itself.
Over the years, as copies of the book lost their jackets, it made it seem as if Capa's most famous picture from the period hadn't even made it into the edit for the book. Some critics suggested that this indicated Capa's own distrust of using the image.
In a 2002 essay in Aperture magazine, however, the critic Richard Whelan recounted the detective work he undertook to prove the authenticity of Capa's Falling Soldier; thatíBorrell Garcíaíwas indeed photographed at the moment of his death.
Before Whelen concluded his study by hypothesising what happened during that day iníCerro Muriano (the essay can be read in its entirety here) he made use of an enlightening study of the photograph by Captain Robert L Franks, chief homicide detective of the Memphis Police Department (who was also a keen photographer).
"The most decisive element in [Franks'] reading [of the image] is the soldierís left hand, seen below his horizontal left thigh," Whelan writes. "Capt. Franks told me in conversation that the fact that the fingers are somewhat curled toward the palm clearly indicates that the manís muscles have gone limp and that he is already dead. Hardly anyone faking death would ever know that such a hand position was necessary in order to make the photograph realistic. It is nearly impossible for any conscious person to resist the reflex impulse to brace his fall by flexing his hand strongly backward at the wrist and extending his fingers out straight."
[caption id="attachment_5258" align="alignnone" width="298" caption="The Falling Soldier (left hand close-up)"]
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The Barbican have cleverly brought Capa's work to a larger audience at a time when contemporary coverage of conflict is ubiquitous. The internet, camera phones and "embedded" photographers have all contributed to a new understanding of war photography.
As in Capa's time, however, the power of the image as a weapon is not to be underestimated.
This Is War! Robert Capa at Work; Gerda Taro: A Retrospective; and On the Subject of War (featuring works by Omer Fast, Geert van Kesteren, Paul Chaní and An-My Lí) run from October 17 until January 25 in the Barbican art gallery.
5 Comments
The name 'Robert Capa' was a construct, Freidmann and Taro invented an imaginary American photographer to solicite higher prices for Andre's own images. John Hersey in his review of Capa's autobiographical account of World War 2 entitled it, "The Man Who Invented Himself". In Capa's own words his Slightly Out of Focus was written with a film script in mind with certain facts altered for dramatic effect !!!
BUT no one can question the veracity of a body of work which includes landing in the first wave on Omaha beach on D Day or jumping by parachute over the Rhine with the 17th Airborne.
It is wonderful for one of the greatest photo journalists of the 20th century to be receiving such exposure again, I am sure the charismatic Robert Capa would have enjoyed the debate, 70 years on.
http://www.slightly-out-of-focus.com
Robert Capa Vintage Illustrated Magazines
2008-10-24 10:31:33
Thanks for your comments Guy. Yes, the series of images that survive from the Omaha landings are incredible.
All of them are shown in the Barbican exhibition along with details of the story that saw most Capa's films from that day accidentally destroyed by a lab assistant at LIFE's London offices (the negatives had been left in a drying cabinet with the heat on high, melting the film emulsion). 11 of the images were saved, ten of which appear in the show. Mark
2008-10-24 10:57:08
For those of you who are now looking for the book here it is.
We have the following available should you be interested.
Death in the Making
Capa, Robert; Taro, Gerda
Book Description: Covici Friede Publishers, New York, 1938.
Book Condition: Very Good With The Exceedingly Rare Dust Jacket. Dust Jacket has Large Chips. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. First Edition. Captions by Capa. Translated and with a Preface by Jay Allen. Arrangement by Andre Kertesz. An important work on the Spanish Civil War. Listed in Parr and Badger. Rare In Dust Jacket!!!!
$1995.00
Please Contact
Scott Byerly
The First Edition
112 Kettering Bend
Delaware, Ohio 43015
740-362-0218
kbyerly1@columbus.rr.com
2008-10-30 01:38:30
I'm Luca Pagni from Italy.
Please read what Richard Welah had indicated in "This Is War! Robert Capa at Work":
"The image, known as Death of a Loyalist militiaman or simply The Falling Soldier, has become almost universally recognized as one of the greatest war photographs ever made (fig. 40). The photograph has also generated a great deal of controversy. In recent years, it has been alleged that Capa staged the scene, a charge that has forced me to undertake a fantastic amount of research
over the course of two decades. (Nota 3)
I have wrestled with the dilemma of how to deal with a photograph that one believes to be genuine but that one cannot know with absolute certainty to be a truthful documentation.
with a caption mentioning the doubts that have been raised about its authenticity ?
Has the taint of suspicion rendered it permanently impotent ?
Will Capa's photograph have to be relegated to the dustbin of history ?
As I will attempt to demonstrate here, the truth concerning The Falling Soldier is neither black nor white.
It is neither a photograph of a man pretending to have been shot, nor an image made during what we would normally consider the heat of battle."
Visitate http://www.photographers.it/articoli/capa.htm
Richard Whelan ci cita in 3 note:
"3 For a review of the debates and evidence both pro and con, see the comprehensive dossier compiled by photography critic Luca Pagni at http://www.photographers.it/articoli/cd_capa/index.html
Proponents of the argument that The Falling Soldier was faked include Phillip Knightley (to be discussed below) and Caroline Brothers; for the latter, see her War and Photography: A Cultural History (London: Routledge, 1997), pp. 178-84."
and...
"23 Francisco Moreno Gómez, La Guerra Civil en Córdoba (1936-1939), 2d ed. (Madrid: Editorial Alpuerto, 1986). Ed. note: Richard Whelan was in the process of rethinking this text in light of new information when he died in May 2007, and the editors have here supplemented his argument with relevant documentation. Unfortunately, despite Brotóns's claim, no such conclusive evidence of the date and place of Borrell's death, much less that he was the only member of the Columna Alcoyana to die on September 5, 1936, has been found, by either Brotóns or other interested historians. It does not exist, as previously thought, in Moreno Gómez's study. Subsequent research in other archives has likewise produced no official documentation of Borrell's death. For example, photo historian Luca Pagni has contacted and received negative responses from several archives, including the Archivo General Militar in Madrid and in Segovia; see
http://www.photographers.it/articoli/cd_capa/index.html
See also http://www.photographers.it/articoli/miliciano.htm for the views of another Alcoy historian, Miguel Pascual Mira, who believes that Federico Borrell was killed at Cerro Muriano on September 5, 1936, but has been unable to locate supporting documentation in any archive. Nevertheless, strong circumstantial evidence does support the identification of Federico Borrell García as Capa's falling soldier, and the date and place of his death as September 5, 1936, at Cerro Muriano."
and...
"25 See
http://www.photographers.it/articoli/miliciano.htm"
2008-11-23 19:25:20
Great article! Although more than two years old, still extremely informative and very useful for my essay. Thank you very much!
2011-01-07 13:50:19
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