Cuba by Korda: Photographs
Cuba's greatest photographer captures the spirit of the Cuban Revolutionand of Cuba itselfin unforgettable images and text.
Kordas photographs and breathtaking reminiscences capture some of the 20th-centurys greatest moments with unprecedented intimacy as no other book ever could or will.
In the first weeks of 1959, Korda joined the staff of the newly created daily newspaper of Cuba, Revolución. From that moment on, Korda documented the heady early days of revolutionary Cuba. When Fidel Castro visited the United States in April 1959, Korda went with him. When Castro visited the Soviet Union in 1963 and 1964, Korda was there, documenting intimate moments with Soviet leader Nikita Kruschevs family and appearing to show the end of the breach that had followed their countrys divergent policies during the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962. But probably Kordas greatest moment came on March 5, 1960, during a funeral ceremony for the victims of the sabotaged French freighter La Coubre, a ship carrying arms purchased by the Cuban military. Fidel knew the attack to be the work of Americas CIA. And it altered relations between the two countries forever after.
Korda was less than a dozen steps from the platform where Fidel Castro was addressing the crowd of mourners. There were foreign observers present, including Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir. Che stepped forward to look over the crowd. Korda shot him through his telephoto lens, even though he was near to him. The result would turn into nothing less than one of the most enduring images of our age, though the picture would not see light of day for another year. It was first published on April 15, 1961, just before the Bay of Pigs invasion, and would only become well known when Ches Italian publisher Gianfranco Feltrinelli printed thousands of posters of the image shortly after Ches death.
Kordas photographs and breathtaking reminiscences capture some of the 20th-centurys greatest moments with unprecedented intimacy as no other book ever could or will.
In the first weeks of 1959, Korda joined the staff of the newly created daily newspaper of Cuba, Revolución. From that moment on, Korda documented the heady early days of revolutionary Cuba. When Fidel Castro visited the United States in April 1959, Korda went with him. When Castro visited the Soviet Union in 1963 and 1964, Korda was there, documenting intimate moments with Soviet leader Nikita Kruschevs family and appearing to show the end of the breach that had followed their countrys divergent policies during the Cuban Missile Crisis of October 1962. But probably Kordas greatest moment came on March 5, 1960, during a funeral ceremony for the victims of the sabotaged French freighter La Coubre, a ship carrying arms purchased by the Cuban military. Fidel knew the attack to be the work of Americas CIA. And it altered relations between the two countries forever after.
Korda was less than a dozen steps from the platform where Fidel Castro was addressing the crowd of mourners. There were foreign observers present, including Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir. Che stepped forward to look over the crowd. Korda shot him through his telephoto lens, even though he was near to him. The result would turn into nothing less than one of the most enduring images of our age, though the picture would not see light of day for another year. It was first published on April 15, 1961, just before the Bay of Pigs invasion, and would only become well known when Ches Italian publisher Gianfranco Feltrinelli printed thousands of posters of the image shortly after Ches death.
Auteur | | Alberto Korda |
Taal | | Engels |
Type | | Paperback |
Categorie | | Mens & Maatschappij |