Monday, 2 September 2013

Haunting Images Chronicle 165 Years Of A World At War

Training on the beach outside Barcelona, Spain, 1936 Hide caption Training on the beach outside Barcelona, Spain, 1936 Gerda Taro/International Center of Photography A U.S. Marine Corps drill instructor delivers a severe reprimand to a recruit, Parris Island, S.C., 1970. Hide caption A U.S. Marine Corps drill instructor delivers a severe reprimand to a recruit, Parris Island, S.C., 1970. Boarding of the transport ship Ajana, Melbourne, Australia, 1916 Hide caption Boarding of the transport ship Ajana, Melbourne, Australia, 1916 Muchachos await counterattack by the National Guard, Matagalpa, Nicaragua, 1978 Hide caption Muchachos await counterattack by the National Guard, Matagalpa, Nicaragua, 1978 A U.S. Marine of the 1st Division carries a GI Joe mascot as a good luck charm as his unit pushes farther into the western part of Fallujah, Iraq, 2004. Hide caption A U.S. Marine of the 1st Division carries a GI Joe mascot as a good luck charm as his unit pushes farther into the western part of Fallujah, Iraq, 2004. An attack on the Eastern Front, WWII, 1941 Dmitri Baltermants/Russian Photo Association Sgt. William Olas Bee, a U.S. Marine from the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, has a close call as Taliban fighters open fire near Garmsir in Helmand province, Afghanistan, 2008. Hide caption Sgt. William Olas Bee, a U.S. Marine from the 24th Marine Expeditionary Unit, has a close call as Taliban fighters open fire near Garmsir in Helmand province, Afghanistan, 2008. Death of a Marine at Dyala Bridge, near Baghdad, Iraq, 2003 Hide caption Death of a Marine at Dyala Bridge, near Baghdad, Iraq, 2003 An American soldier reads a letter from home while taking a break from repairing a tank tread in Lang Vei, Vietnam, 1971. Hide caption An American soldier reads a letter from home while taking a break from repairing a tank tread in Lang Vei, Vietnam, 1971. David Burnett/Contact Press Images Navy Chaplain Lt. Commander Tom Webber baptizes Cpl. Albert Martinez in a sandbag-lined pool during a ceremony at Camp Inchon, Kuwait, 2003. Hide caption Navy Chaplain Lt. Commander Tom Webber baptizes Cpl. Albert Martinez in a sandbag-lined pool during a ceremony at Camp Inchon, Kuwait, 2003. Hayne Palmour IV/U-T San Diego Washington, 1967 Danh Son Huol, an ethnic Khmer guerrilla, is treated by a medical unit in a swamp in U Minh Forest, Ca Mau peninsula, Vietnam, 1970. Hide caption Danh Son Huol, an ethnic Khmer guerrilla, is treated by a medical unit in a swamp in U Minh Forest, Ca Mau peninsula, Vietnam, 1970. Dying infant found by American soldiers in Saipan, 1944 Hide caption Dying infant found by American soldiers in Saipan, 1944 A Bosnian soldier stands on what is believed to be a mass grave outside his destroyed home. He was the sole survivor of a massacre that left 69 people dead, including his family, 1995. Hide caption A Bosnian soldier stands on what is believed to be a mass grave outside his destroyed home. He was the sole survivor of a massacre that left 69 people dead, including his family, 1995. Congolese women flee to Goma, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, 2008. Hide caption Congolese women flee to Goma, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, 2008. Valentine with her daughters, Amelie and Inez, Rwanda, 2006 Hide caption Valentine with her daughters, Amelie and Inez, Rwanda, 2006 Darien, Wis., 2007 Peter van Agtmael/Magnum Photos

D-Day soldiers landing on Omaha Beach. A naked Vietnamese girl running from napalm. A Spanish loyalist, collapsing to the ground in death. These images of war, and some 300 others, are on view at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., in an exhibition called WAR/PHOTOGRAPHY: Images of Armed Conflict and Its Aftermath. Pictures from the mid-19th century to today, taken by commercial photographers, military photographers, amateurs and artists capture 165 years of conflict.

U.S. Marines of the 28th Regiment, 5th Division, raise the American flag atop Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima, on Feb. 23, 1945.

Joe Rosenthal/AP U.S. Marines of the 28th Regiment, 5th Division, raise the American flag atop Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima, on Feb. 23, 1945. U.S. Marines of the 28th Regiment, 5th Division, raise the American flag atop Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima, on Feb. 23, 1945.

Joe Rosenthal/AP

One of the best-known war pictures of all time was taken by AP photographer Joe Rosenthal in 1945. Five Marines and a Navy corpsman, raising the American flag on Mount Suribachi, Iwo Jima.

"It's such an important and historic photograph, but I don't know who any of those guys are," says documentary photographer Louie Palu — who found inspiration in the iconic Rosenthal image. "I wanted to meet the guys in that photograph. I wanted to know the name, the age, how young or how old they looked. I didn't want it to be an anonymous set of people raising a flag."

So when Palu was embedded with troops in Afghanistan's Helmand province in 2008, he made close-up portraits of the men. One of Palu's portraits became the signature image of this war photography show:

It shows 31-year-old U.S. Marine Gunnery Sgt. Carlos "OJ" Orjuela. His face, under his helmet, is caked with mud and sweat and exhaustion. He'd served in Iraq and then Afghanistan. His eyes look as if they have seen everything, and tomorrow they'll have to see some more. His face says "I want to go home," Palu says.

At the Corcoran, wall after wall, photo after photo — black and white, color, by men and women famous and unknown. In this day of the moving image — on movie screens, TV screens, smartphones — curator Anne Tucker says still pictures like these remain for a reason.

U.S. Marine Gunnery Sgt. Carlos "OJ" Orjuela, 31, in Garmsir District, Helmand province, Afghanistan.

Louie Palu/The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston U.S. Marine Gunnery Sgt. Carlos "OJ" Orjuela, 31, in Garmsir District, Helmand province, Afghanistan. U.S. Marine Gunnery Sgt. Carlos "OJ" Orjuela, 31, in Garmsir District, Helmand province, Afghanistan.

Louie Palu/The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

"Still photographs log into our brains differently than moving pictures," says Tucker, who originated the show at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. "And therefore they still have power and they still connect with us."

They're frozen moments. Not ever-changing blinks. They make us stop and look.

You can't take your eyes off the beautiful young soldier with the chiseled cheeks and dirty clothes in a photograph taken in Vietnam in 1971. Resting for a moment, the man sits on the broken track of an armored personnel carrier he's repairing. With long, soiled fingers he holds a clipping from some weekly livestock report. He stares into space. Photojournalist David Burnett took this picture.

"He almost has what they used to call the thousand-yard stare," Burnett says. "He's thinking. I don't know what he's thinking. He's reading a letter from home and it's just a picture that kind of captures him in this moment of pondering what the rest of his life was like when he wasn't being a combat soldier."

Burnett didn't know right away what a powerful image he'd gotten: "My film went into an envelope, was sent to Saigon, was put on a plane, it went to New York, it was developed, it was edited, and the first I even saw the picture was about 10 days later when Time magazine published the photograph."

Burnett didn't get the soldier's name, or age, or hometown, and he regrets that.

"Every time I walk into a diner now and I'll see a couple of Vietnam vets sitting around talking I'll just wonder, could this be the guy from my picture? I would love to be able to find him before one of us passes away," he says.

An American soldier reads a letter from home, while taking a break from repairing a tank tread in Lang Vei, Vietnam, in March 1971.

David Burnett/Contact Press Images An American soldier reads a letter from home, while taking a break from repairing a tank tread in Lang Vei, Vietnam, in March 1971. An American soldier reads a letter from home, while taking a break from repairing a tank tread in Lang Vei, Vietnam, in March 1971.

David Burnett/Contact Press Images

Burnett and the young tank repairman made an anonymous passage through one another's lives. And yet that soldier haunts the photographer.

"Now, 42 years later — just to go have a cup of coffee with this guy — I'd love to do that," Burnett says.

What's the purpose of these pictures? Image after image of men, mostly, at war, carrying guns, under fire, running from — or toward — danger. Killing, being killed.

"We need to tell the public, the public of the entire world what war is really like," says photo editor John Morris. During World War II, Morris ran Life magazine's London office. He was photographer Robert Capa's editor, and later the picture editor at The New York Times and the Washington Post. Morris says the public doesn't get to see everything — not all of war's brutalities.

"As a picture editor, I've often had to make decisions about what the public needs to see and what is going to make the reader throw up," Morris says. "It's a fine line. At The New York Times, I had a bottom drawer full of pictures that were unpublishable, mostly because they were too much to take. One doesn't want to wipe the public in blood. One wants to get the public to learn to avoid bloodshed."

Even if the bloodiest images were published, Afghanistan photographer Louie Palu says war pictures still miss some important elements.

"I'm not really showing what it's like," he says. "You have to imagine people screaming and moaning, the last sound before they die, the smell, men weeping, the sound of flesh as people drag a casualty down a trench."

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