bmattock
Veteran
Note: I posted this under 'philosophy' because of the nature of the statements made by the photographer - more about how he chooses to live his life than about his photography. Nevertheless, he's a noted photographer, quite famous at one time.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article3886309.ece
Click the link to read the rest. I am a fan of Koudelka, but then, I am a fan of nearly all the Czech photographers. They're terrific.
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article3886309.ece
1968: Josef Koudelka and 1968, summer of hate
The Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia sent shock waves around the world. Amy Turner meets Josef Koudelka, the reclusive photographer who saw the tanks roll in, then smuggled these historic images to the West
Josef Koudelka crouched on the roof of a building in Wenceslas Square, Prague, his camera lens trained on the street below. Thousands of Soviet troops rumbled past in tanks – the city was being invaded. Below him, houses and buses were ablaze, bullets were flying and the wounded cried out. Protesters chanted the name of their hero, the Czech president Alexander Dubcek. Some threw stones at the troops. Others pleaded with the soldiers, begging them to go home. One man simply stood before a tank, silently opened his jacket and defied the soldiers to shoot him in the chest.
Click the link to read the rest. I am a fan of Koudelka, but then, I am a fan of nearly all the Czech photographers. They're terrific.
