[American Troops Landing on D-Day, Omaha Beach, Normandy Coast, France]

Robert Capa American, born Hungary

Not on view

For twenty-two years as a war correspondent, Capa was a witness to the twentieth century's most momentous events: the Spanish Civil War, the London blitz, World War II, the birth of Israel, and the war in Indochina; he died after stepping on a mine while covering this last conflict. Capa could just as easily have perished on D-Day when he made this unforgettable photograph while wading ashore in Normandy with one of the first landings of soldiers on Omaha Beach. Capa made seventy-nine photographs of the first hours of the invasion. Tragically, a careless lab assistant ruined all but seven negatives, the only photographic record of the first wave.

[American Troops Landing on D-Day, Omaha Beach, Normandy Coast, France], Robert Capa (American (born Hungary), Budapest 1913–1954 Thai Binh), Gelatin silver print

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