we can easily tell the photo is staged or not, because in the photo we can not see any blood from the solider if he got gun shot. and the way that solider fall to the ground. i think the authenticity of the photo is depend on what situation, for Capa’s case, during the war is really hard to catch the photo that really have the pose like this one, but no matter the photo is fake or not he is showing how the war looks like to the entire community.
Contact Information
Professor Sandra Cheng
Office: Namm 602B
Office Hours: Tu/Th 9-10 am or
by appointment
Office Tel: 718-260-5003
Email: scheng@citytech.cuny.eduHelpful Links
New York Times Arts
Blogroll
-
Recent Posts
- Re: Photographing the Beginning of the Civil Rights Movement
- Re:Discussion Topic: Street Art, Photography, and the Inside Out Project in Times Square
- Re: Tim Hetherington and Modern-day War Photography
- Response to: Tim Hetherington and Modern-day War Photography
- Photographing the Beginning of the Civil Rights Movement
Recent Comments
- Michael Lorenzo on Discussion Topic: Street Art, Photography, and the Inside Out Project in Times Square
- Michael Lorenzo on Discussion Topic: Tim Hetherington and Modern-day War Photography
- Michael Lorenzo on Discussion Topic: The Greatest War Photograph and Robert Capa
- Phalenta Pamphile on Discussion Topic: Street Art, Photography, and the Inside Out Project in Times Square
- Shantel on Discussion Topic: Photographing the Beginning of the Civil Rights Movement
Archives
Categories
Meta