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A couple who framed war

Robert Capa is regarded as an iconic war photographer. His partner, Gerda Taro, is now winning similar acclaim.

October 17, 2008 11:08
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By

Melanie Abrams ,

Melanie Abrams

3 min read

The moment Hungarian photographer André Friedmann and his German girlfriend Gerta Pohorylle decided to change their names was a hugely significant one in the history of photography. 

Friedmann was looking for a name that would make it easier to present himself as a French photographer to American magazine and newspaper editors, and as an American photographer to French editors, and which would mark him out from the other Jewish émigrés who had gravitated to Paris during the 1930s. So he borrowed from Hollywood actor Robert Taylor and director Frank Capra, and became Robert Capa.

The ploy helped - Capa went on to be described as "the greatest war photographer in the world" by the UK's Picture Post magazine. He took some of the most iconic war images of the 20th century, including the famous Death of a Loyalist Militiaman, in which he captured a Spanish soldier falling backwards at the very moment a bullet hits him in the chest.

Pohorylle meanwhile based her new name on the screen goddess Greta Garbo, becoming Gerda Taro. In her case, though, enduring fame as a photographer failed to follow. She became known for her romance with Capa, although many believe her own images stand comparison with her partner's. She organised Capa's career as a photographer and he taught her how to use a camera. Together they photographed the unfolding events of the Spanish Civil War in 1936, but she has received little of the acclaim accorded to Capa.