Robert Capa Gold Medal

In this article, the topic of Robert Capa Gold Medal will be addressed from different perspectives, with the purpose of exploring its implications, applications and relevance today. Its historical context, its possible impacts in various areas and its relevance in the current panorama will be analyzed in detail. Likewise, its possible future implications will be delved into and various points of view on Robert Capa Gold Medal will be discussed. Through a journey through different approaches and opinions, the aim is to provide the reader with a comprehensive and detailed vision of this topic, with the aim of encouraging debate and reflection.

The Robert Capa Gold Medal is an award for "best published photographic reporting from abroad requiring exceptional courage and enterprise". It is awarded annually by the Overseas Press Club of America (OPC). It was created in honor of the war photographer Robert Capa. The first Robert Capa Gold Medal was awarded in 1955 to Howard Sochurek.

Winners

Year Recipient OPC Awarded For Organization
1955 Howard Sochurek 17 Coverage of North Vietnam Magnum for Life
1956 John Sadovy 18 Hungarian Revolution Life
1957 no award 19
1958 Paul Bruck 20 "Coverage of Lebanon" CBS News
1959 Mario Biasetti 21 "Recording the Nicaragua revolt from both sides at great risk" CBS News
1960 Yung Su Kwon 22 "Coverage of Japanese riots at the time of James Hagerty's arrival" NBC News
1961 no award 23
1962 Peter Dehmel and Klaus Dehmel 24 "The Tunnel" NBC News
1963 Larry Burrows 25 "Jungle War in Vietnam" Life
1964 Horst Faas 26 Coverage of Vietnam Associated Press
1965 Larry Burrows 27 "With a Brave Crew in a Deadly Flight" Life
1966 Henri Huet 28 Vietnam Associated Press
1967 David Douglas Duncan 29 "Inside the Cone of Fire - Con Thien, Vietnam" Life and ABC News
1968 John Olson 30 "The Battle That Regained and Ruined Huế" Life
1969 Anonymous Czech photographer
(Later revealed to be Josef Koudelka)
31 "From A Death to Remember" Look
1970 Kyoichi Sawada 32 "Coverage of war in Cambodia" United Press International
1971 Larry Burrows 33 "Coverage of war in Laotian war zone" Life
1972 Clive W. Limpkin 34 "Battle of Bogside" Penguin Books
1973 David Burnett, Raymond Depardon, and Chas Gerretsen 35 "Chile" Gamma Presse Images
1974 W. Eugene Smith 36 "Minamata, Japan: Life - Sacred and Profane" Camera 35
1975 Dirck Halstead 37 Coverage of Vietnam Time
1976 Catherine Leroy 38 Coverage of street fighting in Beirut. Gamma for Time
1977 Eddie Adams 39 "The Boat of No Smiles" The Associated Press
1978 Susan Meiselas 40 Nicaraguan Revolution Time
1979 Kaveh Golestan 41 "Coverage of the Iranian Revolution" Time
1980 Steve McCurry 42 "Undercover photography of Afghan rebels" Time
1981 Rudi Frey 43 Coverage in Poland Time
1982 Harry Mattison 44 "Coverage of guerilla warfare in El Salvador" Time
1983 James Nachtwey 45 "Lebanon" Time
1984 James Nachtwey 46 "Photos of El Salvador" Black Star for Time
1985 Peter Magubane 47 "Cry for Justice: Cry for Peace" Time
1986 James Nachtwey 48 "Island at War" Time/GEO (German edition)
1987 Janet Knott 49 "Democracy: What Price?" The Boston Globe
1988 Chris Steele-Perkins 50 "Graveside Terror" Magnum for Time Magazine
1989 David Turnley 51 "Revolutions in China and Romania" Black Star for The Detroit Free Press
1990 Bruce Haley 52 Civil war in Myanmar Black Star for U.S. News & World Report
1991 Christopher Morris 53 "Slaughter in Vukovar" Black Star for Time
1992 Luc Delahaye 54 "Sarajevo: Life in the War Zone" Sipa Press
1993 Paul Watson 55 "Mogadishu" The Toronto Star
1994 James Nachtwey 56 "Election Violence in South Africa" Magnum for Time Magazine
1995 Anthony Suau 57 "Grozny: Russia's Nightmare" Time
1996 Corinne Dufka 58 "Liberia: From a Dead Man's Wallet" Reuters
1997 Horst Faas/Tim Page 59 "Requiem: By the Photographers Who Died in Vietnam and Indochina" Random House
1998 James Nachtwey 60 "Indonesia: Descent into Madness" Magnum for Time
1999 John Stanmeyer 61 "The Killing of Bernardino Guterres in Dili, East Timor" SABA for Time
2000 Chris Anderson 62 "Desperate Passage" Aurora for The New York Times Magazine,
2001 Luc Delahaye 63 "Afghanistan" Magnum for Newsweek
2002 Carolyn Cole 64 "Church of the Nativity: In the Center of the Siege" The Los Angeles Times
2003 Carolyn Cole 65 "Covering Conflict: Iraq and Liberia" The Los Angeles Times
2004 Ashley Gilbertson 66 "The Battle for Fallujah" Aurora for The New York Times
2005 Chris Hondros 67 "One Night In Tal Afar" Getty Images
2006 Paolo Pellegrin 68 "True Pain: Israel & Hizbullah" Magnum for Newsweek
2007 John Moore 69 "The Assassination of Benazir Bhutto" Getty Images for Newsweek
2008 Shaul Schwarz 70 "Kenya: The Wreckage of a Democracy" Getty Images for Newsweek
2009 Khalil Hamra 71 "War in Gaza" Associated Press
2010 Agnes Dherbeys 72 Violence Erupts in Thailand Freelance for The New York Times
2011 André Liohn 73 "Almost Dawn in Libya" Prospekt Photographers for Newsweek - International Committee of the Red Cross
2012 Fabio Bucciarelli 74 "Battle to Death" Freelance for AFP
2013 Tyler Hicks 75 "Attack on a Kenyan Mall" The New York Times
2014 Marcus Bleasdale 76 "Central African Republic Inferno" Human Rights Watch, National Geographic
2015 Bassam Khabieh 77 "Field Hospital Damascus" Reuters
2016 Bryan Denton
Sergey Ponomarev
78 "What ISIS Wrought" The New York Times
2017 Carol Guzy 79 "Scars Of Mosul: The Legacy of ISIS" Zuma Press
2018 Carolyn Van Houten 80 "The road to Asylum: Inside the migrant caravans" The Washington Post
2019 Dieu Nalio Chery 81 "Haiti: Nation on the Brink" Associated Press
2020 Kiana Hayeri 82 "Where Prison Is a Kind of Freedom" The New York Times Magazine
2021 Anonymous 83 "Myanmar in Turmoil" Getty Images

References

  1. ^ a b "Capa, Robert". Museum of Contemporary Photography. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  2. ^ a b c Winslow, Donald R. (24 April 2014). "Tyler Hicks Awarded 2013 Robert Capa Gold Medal Award". NPPA. Retrieved 2016-06-21. The first Capa Gold Medal was awarded in 1955 to Howard Sochurek.
  3. ^ The year of the award is the year of the work. From 2009, the recipient is named in April of the next year.
  4. ^ Schurk, Howard; Northup, Steve; Azzi, Robert; Sloan, Lester; Forman, Stanley (Summer 1980). "Photographic Portfolios of Nieman Alumni: Howard Sochurek Nieman Fellow 1960" (PDF). Nieman Reports. Vol. XXXIV, no. 2. p. 16. Retrieved 2016-07-23. North Viet-nam (...) in 1955
  5. ^ Robertson, Louise (13 January 2011). "Award-winning Hungarian uprising photogapher has died". ThisIsLocalLondon. Retrieved 2016-06-21. in 1956
  6. ^ "The 1956 Hungarian Revolution in Pictures by John Sadovy". Hungarian Cultural Centre in London. 18 October 2016. Retrieved 2016-09-08. earning him the second ever Robert Capa Gold Medal.
  7. ^ Capa, Capa & Karia 1974, p. 127. 1958: "Paul Bruck"
  8. ^ Capa, Capa & Karia 1974, p. 127. 1959: "Mario Biasetti"
  9. ^ "Snippet view". books.google.com. 1960. Retrieved 2016-07-17.
  10. ^ Capa, Capa & Karia 1974, p. 127. 1960: "Yung Su Kwon"
  11. ^ Capa, Capa & Karia 1974, p. 127. 1962: "Peter Dehmel and Klaus Dehmel"
  12. ^ a b Capa, Capa & Karia 1974, pp. 127. 1963–65: "Larry Burrows"
  13. ^ Hunt, George P. (8 May 1964). "LIFE's Twenty-one Award Winners". Life. Vol. 56, no. 19. p. 3. Retrieved 2016-07-23. in Vietnam
  14. ^ Capa, Capa & Karia 1974, p. 127. 1964: "Horst Faas"
  15. ^ Kuhn, Annette; McAllister, Kirsten Emiko (20 December 2006). Locating Memory: Photographic Acts. Remapping cultural history. Vol. 4. Berghahn. ISBN 978-1-84545-219-3. Retrieved 2016-07-21. Yankee Papa 13
  16. ^ "Henri Huet". The Digital Journalist. November 1997. Retrieved 2016-06-20. Henri won the Robert Capa gold medal in 1967
  17. ^ Capa, Capa & Karia 1974, p. 127. 1966-67: "Henri Huet"
  18. ^ "Snippet view". books.google.com. 1967. Retrieved 2016-07-16.
  19. ^ Roth, Mitchel P.; Olson, James Stuart (22 April 1997). Historical Dictionary of War Journalism. Greenwood. p. 325. ISBN 978-0-38795-363-2. In 1967
  20. ^ "An Interview with John Olson". The Digital Journalist. July 2001. Retrieved 2016-06-20. in 1967, and less than a year later he had won the Robert Capa Gold Medal for his coverage of the Siege of Hue
  21. ^ Capa, Capa & Karia 1974, p. 127. 1970: "Anonymous"
  22. ^ Faas, Horst; Page, Tim (November 1997). "Requiem". The Digital Journalist. Retrieved 2016-06-20. After his death in Cambodia('Died: October 28, 1970'), he received the Robert Capa Gold Medal
  23. ^ Pomeroy, Charles (13 September 2011). Foreign Correspondents in Japan. Tuttle. ISBN 978-1-46290-194-4. Retrieved 2016-07-19. in Vietnam
  24. ^ Le Gall, Hervé (10 February 2011). "Hommage à Larry Burrows, photographe de guerre et homme de paix (1926-1971)" [Tribute to Larry Burrows, war photographer and man of peace (1926-1971).]. Shots.fr (in French). Retrieved 2016-07-07. Robert Capa Gold medal en 1971
  25. ^ Kershaw 2012: "Indo-China"
  26. ^ Capa, Capa & Karia 1974, p. 127. 1973: "Limpkin"
  27. ^ "The Photographers Bio & Portfolios: David Burnett". Contact Press Images. 2016. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  28. ^ "Raymond Depardon". PalmeraieEtDesert.fr. Retrieved 2016-06-21. 1973
  29. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal 1973". Overseas Press Club of America. 16 December 1973. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  30. ^ Desfor, Irving (25 May 1975). "Minamata pollution story told in Gene Smith Photos". Brownwood Bulletin  – via google.com indexing newspapers.com OCR extract (subscription required) . Retrieved 2016-07-06.
  31. ^ McDarrah, Gloria S.; McDarrah, Fred W.; McDarrah, Timothy S. (1 December 1998). The Photography Encyclopedia. Schirmer. ISBN 978-0-02865-025-8. Retrieved 2016-07-22. Smith's Minamata
  32. ^ "Dirck Halstead, INC". The Digital Journalist. Retrieved 2016-06-20. In 1975, he won the Robert Capa Gold Medal
  33. ^ Winslow, Donald R. (11 July 2006). "Vietnam War Photojournalist Catherine Leroy, 60". NPPA. Retrieved 2016-06-20. in 1976
  34. ^ Winslow, Donald R. (18 September 2009). "Eddie Adams' Archive Donated To University Of Texas Briscoe Center". NPPA. Retrieved 2016-06-20. in 1977
  35. ^ "Susan Meiselas carrying the past, forward". Fotografie Forum Frankfurt. 9 March 2016. Retrieved 2016-06-21. (1979)
  36. ^ "Kaveh Golestan". IranChamber.com. Retrieved 2016-06-21. In 1979
  37. ^ "Still Moving: Photographs by Steve McCurry". Palmer Museum of Art. 14 June 2016. Retrieved 2016-06-21. in 1980
  38. ^ "Post Correspondent Wins Award for Sadat Story". The Washington Post. 29 April 1982. Retrieved 2016-06-21. Rudi Frey of Time magazine
  39. ^ "Snippet view". books.google.com. 1982. Retrieved 2016-07-15.
  40. ^ "Image, Memory and the Paradox of Peace". The University of Texas at Austin. 17 April 2008. Retrieved 2016-06-21. In 1982
  41. ^ a b c d e "James Nachtwey leaves VIII Photo". The Daily Telegraph. 11 April 2013. Retrieved 2016-06-19. Robert Capa Gold Medal (1983, 1984, 1986, 1994 and 1998)
  42. ^ "Overseas Press Club awards for 1985". UPI. 16 April 1986. Retrieved 2016-06-21. Peter Magubane, a resident of Soweto, South Africa, for pictures of life in his country
  43. ^ "Knott wins award for haiti photos". The Boston Globe  – via PqArchiver.com (subscription required) . 20 April 1988. p. 82. Retrieved 2016-07-05.
  44. ^ "The Overseas Press Club Thursday awarded its top foreign..." UPI. 11 May 1989. Retrieved 2016-06-21. Chris Steel-Perkins, Time magazine, for 'Graveside Terror.'
  45. ^ Chapnick 1994, p. 285: "in 1990"
  46. ^ Warren, Mathew R. (4 March 2011). "Rebuilding Lives in Former Soviet Lands". The New York Times. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  47. ^ a b "Overseas Press Club Gives Award to Terry Anderson". The New York Times. 6 May 1992. Retrieved 2016-06-16. their work in 1991 during the club's 53d annual awards dinner
  48. ^ a b Richards, Roger (August 2004). "View from the Photo Desk: Luc Delahaye". The Digital Journalist. Retrieved 2016-06-18. he received the Overseas Press Club's Robert Capa Gold Medal (2002 & 1993)
  49. ^ "About Paul Watson". ArcticStarCreativity.com. Retrieved 2016-07-04. his 1993 Somalia image
  50. ^ Macleod, Duncan (27 February 2009). "Anthony Suau wins World Press Photo Award". theInspirationRoom.com. Retrieved 2016-07-03. in 1995
  51. ^ "Overseas Press Club, New York". American Photo. July–August 1997. p. 25. Retrieved 2016-07-02. Announced: April 1997
  52. ^ Page, Tim (September 2005). "Separations of Neil". The Digital Journalist. Retrieved 2016-06-20. including the 1997 Robert Capa Gold Medal Award
  53. ^ Seno, Alexandra A. (20 December 2010). "A Photographer's View of Balinese Rituals". WSJ. Retrieved 2016-06-19. Robert Capa Gold Medal award in 1999
  54. ^ a b "Overseas Press Club Presents 20 International Reporting Awards". PR Newswire. 26 April 2001. Retrieved 2016-06-18. OPC's 62nd Annual Awards Dinner
  55. ^ a b DeFoore, Jay (30 April 2004). "Carolyn Cole Wins Another Major Photo Award". Editor & Publisher. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  56. ^ "Times' Carolyn Cole Honored for Bethlehem Siege Photos". The Los Angeles Times. 16 February 2003. Retrieved 2018-04-29.
  57. ^ "Ashley Gilbertson Wins The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award For Coverage Of Fallujah". NPPA. 15 April 2005. Retrieved 2016-06-17.
  58. ^ "IRP Fellow Chris Hondros receives 2005 Robert Capa award for photography". International Reporting Project. Retrieved 2016-06-17.
  59. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2006". OPC. 16 December 2006. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  60. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2007". OPC. 16 December 2007. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  61. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2008". OPC. 16 December 2008. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  62. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2009". OPC. 22 April 2010. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  63. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2010". OPC. 27 April 2011. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  64. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2011". OPC. 28 April 2012. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  65. ^ Wallace, Vaughn (24 April 2013). "2013 Overseas Press Club Winners Announced". Time. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  66. ^ Katz, Andrew (30 April 2015). "Marcus Bleasdale Wins Robert Capa Gold Medal". Time. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  67. ^ Lowry, Rachel (28 April 2016). "Bassam Khabieh Wins Robert Capa Gold Medal". Time. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  68. ^ a b Boorstein, Tamara (28 April 2016). "77th Annual Overseas Press Club Awards". OPC. Retrieved 2016-06-16.
  69. ^ "Denton and Ponomarev Win Robert Capa Gold Medal Award". PDN. 21 March 2017. Retrieved 2017-04-28.
  70. ^ "78th Overseas Press Club of America 03 The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award". OPC. 28 March 2017. Retrieved 2017-04-28.
  71. ^ Denton, Bryan (30 July 2016). "At the Front in a Scarred Falluja". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-04-28.
  72. ^ Ponomarev, Sergey; Arango, Tim (22 November 2016). "Mosul's Front Lines: Scenes of Flight". The New York Times. Retrieved 2017-04-28.
  73. ^ Walker, David (22 March 2018). "Carol Guzy Wins 2018 Robert Capa Gold Medal Award". PDN. Retrieved 2018-04-27.
  74. ^ "79th Overseas Press Club of America 03 The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award". OPC. 28 March 2018. Retrieved 2018-04-27.
  75. ^ Guzy, Carol (7 July 2017). "Scars Of Mosul: The Legacy of ISIS". zReportage. Retrieved 2018-04-27.
  76. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2018". OPC. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  77. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2019". OPC. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  78. ^ "The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2020". OPC. Retrieved 2022-05-10.
  79. ^ "03 The Robert Capa Gold Medal Award 2021". OPC. Retrieved 2022-05-10.

Bibliography

External links