Who is the No 1 photographer in the world?
Post Views: 604 Steve McCurry is famous for his photo ‘Afghan girl,’ taken in a refugee camp in Peshawar, Pakistan. This photo was named the... Who is the No 1 photographer in the world?

Steve McCurry is famous for his photo ‘Afghan girl,’ taken in a refugee camp in Peshawar, Pakistan. This photo was named the most recognized photo of National Geographic.

is an American photographer, freelancer and photojournalist. His most famous photo is of the “Afghan Girl“, the girl with the piercing green eyes that periodically appears on the cover of National Geographic. McCurry has photographed many assignments for National Geographic and has been a member of Magnum since 1986.

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McCurry is the recipient of numerous awards, including Magazine Photographer of the Year, awarded by the National Press Photographers Association; the Royal Photographic Society’s Centenary Medaland two first-place prizes in the World Press Photo contest (1985 and 1992).

McCurry attended Penn State University. He originally planned to study cinematography and filmmaking, but instead gained a degree in theater arts and graduated in 1974. He became interested in photography when he started taking pictures for the Penn State newspaper The Daily Collegian. 

After working at Today’s Post in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania for two years, he left, in 1978, to freelance in India. After a year working there, McCurry traveled to northern Pakistan where he met two Afghans who told him about the war across the border in Afghanistan.

McCurry’s career was launched when, disguised in Afghani garb, he crossed the Pakistan border into rebel-controlled areas of Afghanistan just before the Soviet invasion. “As soon as I crossed the border, I came across about 40 houses and a few schools that were just bombed out,” he says. “They were literally destroying whole villages with helicopter gunships.”  He left with rolls of film sewn into his turban and stuffed in his socks and underwear. These images were subsequently published by The New York TimesTime and Paris Match and won him the Robert Capa Gold Medal for Best Photographic Reporting from Abroad. 

 

McCurry covered more armed conflicts like the Iran–Iraq WarLebanon Civil War, the Cambodian Civil War, the Islamic insurgency in the Philippines, the Gulf War and the Afghan Civil War. There have been a couple of dangerous moments where McCurry came close to losing his life. He was almost drowned in India and he survived an airplane crash in Yugoslavia. McCurry has had his work featured in magazines worldwide and he is a frequent contributor to National Geographic.

 

McCurry concentrates on the toll war takes on humans. He intends to show what war does to not only the landscape, but to the people who inhabit that land. “Most of my images are grounded in people. I look for the unguarded moment, the essential soul peeking out, experience etched on a person’s face. I try to convey what it is like to be that person, a person caught in a broader landscape, that you could call the human condition.” What McCurry wants his viewers to take away from his photographs is the “human connection between all of us.” He believes there is always some common thing between all humans despite the differences in religion, language, ethnicity, etc. McCurry also states, “I have found that I get completely consumed by the importance of the story I am telling, the feeling that the world has got to know. It’s never about the adrenaline. It’s about the story.”  However, sometimes McCurry has witnessed some “horrific” and “distressing” sights. In times like these, he uses his camera as a “shield” because it’s easier to witness these events through a viewfinder.

On September 10, 2001, McCurry had just gotten back from Tibet. The morning of September 11, McCurry received a call saying the World Trade Center was on fire. He went up to the roof of his building and started taking photographs, he didn’t know it was a plane that hit the towers. McCurry was on the roof when both of the towers fell, “they were just gone. It didn’t seem possible. Like you’re seeing something but you don’t really believe what you’re seeing.”  After the fall of the towers, McCurry ran to Ground Zero with his assistant. He describes the scene, “there was this very fine white powder everywhere and all this office paper, but there was no recognizable office equipment—no filing cabinets, telephones, computers. It seemed like the whole thing had been pulverized.” McCurry left later that night and went back early on September 12, he didn’t have any press credentials and had to sneak past security. He was eventually caught and escorted off Ground Zero, he wouldn’t go back again.

McCurry is portrayed in a TV documentary The Face of the Human Condition (2003) by Denis Delestrac.

McCurry switched from shooting color slide film to digital capture in 2005 for the convenience of editing in the field and transmitting images to photo editors. He admitted to no nostalgia about working in film in an interview with The Guardian. “Perhaps old habits are hard to break, but my experience is that the majority of my colleagues, regardless of age, have switched over… The quality has never been better. You can work in extremely low light situations, for example.”

McCurry shoots in both film and digital, however, admits he prefers shooting with transparency film. Eastman Kodak gifted the last roll of Kodachrome film to ever be produced by Kodak. The roll was processed in July 2010 by Dwayne’s Photo in Parsons, Kansas. Most of these photos were published on the Internet by Vanity Fair. McCurry states, “I shot it for 30 years and I have several hundred thousand pictures on Kodachrome in my archive. I’m trying to shoot 36 pictures that act as some kind of wrap up – to mark the passing of Kodachrome. It was a wonderful film.”

“Afghan Girl”

McCurry took his most recognized portrait, “Afghan Girl“,  in December 1984 of an approximately 12-year-old Pashtun orphan in the Nasir Bagh refugee camp near Peshawar, PakistanMcCurry found the girl when he heard “unexpected laughter” coming from children inside a one-room school tent for girls. “I noticed this one little girl with these incredible eyes, and I instantly knew that this was really the only picture I wanted to take,” he says. This was the first time the girl had ever been photographed.  The image itself was named as “the most recognized photograph” in the history of the National Geographic magazine, and her face became famous as the cover photograph on the June 1985 issue. The photo has also been widely used on Amnesty International brochures, posters, and calendars. The identity of the “Afghan Girl” remained unknown for over 17 years until McCurry and a National Geographic team located the woman, Sharbat Gula, in 2002. McCurry said, “Her skin is weathered; there are wrinkles now, but she is as striking as she was all those years ago.”

Controversy about photo manipulation

In 2016 McCurry was accused of extensively manipulating his images with Photoshop and by other means, removing individuals and other elements. 

In a May 2016 interview with PetaPixel, McCurry did not specifically deny making major changes, indicating that he now defines his work as “visual storytelling” and as “art”. However, he subsequently added that others print and ship his images while he is travelling, implying that they were responsible for the significant manipulation. “That is what happened in this case. It goes without saying that what happened with this image was a mistake for which I have to take responsibility,” he concluded.

When discussing the issue with a writer for Times Lightbox website, McCurry provided similar comments about being a “visual storyteller”, though without suggesting that the manipulation was done by others without his knowledge. In fact, the Time writer made the following statement, “Faced with mounting evidence of his own manipulations, McCurry has been forced to address his position in photography.” In neither interview did he discuss when the heavy photo manipulation began, or which images have been manipulated. However, considering the controversy it has created, he said that “going forward, I am committed to only using the program in a minimal way, even for my own work taken on personal trips.” McCurry also offered the following conclusion to Time Lightbox, “Reflecting on the situation … even though I felt that I could do what I wanted to my own pictures in an aesthetic and compositional sense, I now understand how confusing it must be for people who think I’m still a photojournalist.”