Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2001/06/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]There have been discussions as you have outlined, but it has been my understanding that the photograph was verified as authentic only in the last few years. The soldier in the photo was identified by name and as the only man on the Republican side in the engagement killed that day. That Capa would have staged a picture with the only man to have later been shot would have been unlikely. There is still some speculation as how the exposure was made. One version has it that Capa held his camera over the top of the trench in which he was taking cover and pressed the shutter release blindly, the resulting image a complete fluke. Another was that he was focussing on the man, tripping the shutter simultaneously with his having been also struck by a bullet, also a completely unexpected outcome. I read about this in one of the photo magazines, possibly American Photo or DoubleTake. Sorry, I don't really remember the source, but those are the only ones to which I subscribe (although I browse a lot, so it could have been another.) Until the proof sheet is published, the matter can't be settled completely, but I see no reason to consider the picture as posed. I do believe, however, that it was unintentional. Allen Zak In a message dated 06/20/2001 7:18:50 AM, you wrote: <<From Sal DiMarco Jr. The Famous Robert Capa photo of the Spanish Loyalist falling at the moment of death was made with a Leica. - ----------------------- I have always been fascinated by that photo because to me it screamed FAKE. I cannot see how anybody can have reactions quick enough to have captured that image unless he was taking a portrait of the soldier and at the instant the shutter was pressed the poor guy took a bullet in the chest. This is my opinion not of a photographer but as an ex-soldier. A few years ago, when Eric Welch was anchorman of the LUG, someone wrote that he had actually seen the roll of film that Capa sent to the Times(?). Apparantly the roll was full of various arrangements of the theme with the same soldier posing and falling. The Times(?) selected the best of the bunch. Eric (an ethical PJ) suppressed further discussion in his usual way, so the issue was never resolved. Anybody posting in that thread was made to feel as though he was pissing on his grandmothers grave. Is this story of the negatives a modern fairy tale? Alan >>