Tuesday, 15 April 2014

Tony Vaccaro

“I want a great person. Somebody who gives something to humanity.” – Tony Vaccaro

Tony Vaccaro is a world renowned war photographer who came to prominence with his photography during World War II. The photographs he took between this period were in Europe of soldiers of the Allies during war time. After this period he became a renowned photographer in the areas of fashion and lifestyle. 
He was born in Greensburg, Pennsylvania to Italian immigrant parents with the name Michelantonio Celestino Onofrio Vaccaro in December of 1922. However in the year of 1926 he and his family moved back to Italy to the city of Bonefro.

With the outbreak of World War II Tony left his home in Bonefro due to the Fascist regime and the conscription the Italian military had put in place. Tony, at the age of just seventeen, decided to travel back to the United States and finish his education in high school at New Rochelle, New York. However this was not to be the end of his involvement or understanding of military service as in 1943 Tony found himself drafted by the United States Military and subsequently he was deployed in 1944 to Europe as the war was coming to an end, despite anybody at the time knowing that  and  of course another year of Hell to witness.

This time at 1944 was still a very turbulent time and Tony found himself in many battles and skirmishes, including being part of the Normandy Landing serving as a private, and later in Germany, as part of the the 83rd Infantry Division of the United States Army. His position at the time was that of a scout which allowed him enough free time here and there to take photos which was something he was always interested in and had a passion for. With his talents being displayed across the camp, with many fellow soldiers complimenting him, Vaccaro was then installed as an official photographer for his companies newspaper. For this paper Vaccaro was asked to photograph what it was like for troops and to try an show case how hard their struggle was.
Vaccaro was officially discharged in 1945, however he stayed in Germany, getting his first job as a photographer, out of the army, for American officials who were stationed in Frankfurt and he then got a job with a United States newspaper called Stars and Stipes which was a Sunday supplement of an American army supplement.

Vaccaro left Germany and Europe in 1949 and went to work for the publications Life, Look and eventually Flair. Having spent numerous hours, days, weeks and months photographing his time in the war more than 4,000 of his pictures were ‘lost’ or destroyed because his  superiors did not want the honesty of his images getting out, much like how years later the images of soldiers bodies returning from Vietnam damaged Richard Nixon’s presidency.

Despite this being a huge problem it also highlighted the ingenious of Vaccaro because it was revealed how he developed his photographs at the time. He was shooting with an Argus C3 and what he did was mix the solution of chemicals for developing photographs in the helmets of soldiers in his platoon. It was not only ingenious then but to this day people view it as inspirational.

One of Tony Vaccaro’s most influential works as I have already mentioned in terms of time is his work during World War Two and his work entitled ‘Entering Germany 1944-1949’ is really a staple of his career. It is not a look at just the beginning of war, the aftermaths of war or the parts that happen in between. It is a collection of images that capture everything of war, the service, the death but also and more importantly the reality. The hardships, the loss, the heartache, the devastation and everything in-between. This is not a look at war from every angle, as that is so hard to do but rather it is a haunting look at war and its cost through the eyes of one man and realistically a man who is an outsider.

This work, ‘Entering Germany’, really was a glorifying moment not only for photographers but also for Journalists because it showed how people need to capture moments in history. It was perhaps the start of what we see as common sense in journalism. It gave us the idea of showing what was really going on rather than putting a spin on the story and how despite the awful material sometimes people just need to know the truth. War is not all about the victories of those who won the battles and wars but the sacrifice that those who fought the skirmishes and melees.

Tony has captured some of the most famous people on camera and yet still holds such a sense of modesty. He has snapped Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dali and Jackson Pollock, all of whom were widely renowned people who would detest a photograph. It was his sterling work however during World War II that brought so many to his door to be photographed rather than the other way round.

Despite his most famous picture arguably being ‘White Death’ Tony has been one of the most constant photographers of any generation, He has never turned away from an unsettling topic and also has gone through more than many would ever believe could be possible for his work.

You know this is the second photography module I have taken, I say taken but I mean had to take, but I enjoyed both. My lecturer was great but I had no interest in taking this module again. However when given the option to explore an artist on our own I really found something great. Tony Vaccaro was one of the most interesting figures I have come across in photography. He is clearly one of those guys from a certain era, much like Oliver Stone, who try to tell you of  a story and a true tale yet the ‘youth’ or more accurately the ‘now in power’ try to to tell you that time is over.

The reason I picked Tony Vaccaro was because not only did his photos speak to me in a simple form of just being good looking photos but it came from the fact that his photographs told a much bigger story. His photographs told  a story about how each was far deeper than what I was seeing when I saw their images on a video. He was capturing a momentous occasion.

Why Tony Vaccaro holds such a great place in today’s youth is because for me personally, everything he captured, despite it being from years ago, still holds a truth which needs to be remembered today. He captured the hate, hatred, destruction and loss of humanity.

Tony shot some of the most important images, in my opinion of World War II, but he still sits as one of the greatest photographers ever. It has nothing to do with how or where he looked at the war but it came down to how he captured it. And honestly for me he captured it like no one else. He was able to show the beauty and horror of war in the same shot and it was not only magical but soul destroying at the same time.

Honestly the reason I love Tony Vaccaro’s photography is very simple. It is the honesty he portrays in his shots. He never pulls any punches or holds back. He is honest and makes people question their own reality and the reality in which they live. I never thought photography could be this interesting but Tony made me sit up and take notice.

My views on Tony are that he was one of the best social documentarians on life, mainly for a soldier and civilian during World War II. His photography was able to capture such a huge  riff in social class and to this day it continues, He was able to show the torment many went through while others sat at home home talking about what what was really happening.  

My final Photo-Book was in fact very influenced by Mr Vaccaro. It was his look on human nature and human devotion which drove me to my book.

I guess my real inspiration for Tony Vaccaro comes from his honesty and ability to just not give a blind ‘F**K’ about anybody else. I find that most admirable than anything else, the ability to not worry about others.
My own Photo Book idea sort of came from Tony because he saw such a travesty and was part of it. I guess mine was a  little bit wrong because he was part of a war which defined history and mine was just a war I am battling with myself. 



REF:
http://www.goodreads.com/book/show/1649130.Entering_Germany

http://www.theglobalist.com/shooting-germany-1944-1949/

http://museemagazine.com/art-2/features/photographers-speak-out-on-the-digital-takeover/

http://queenscourier.com/2013/tony-vaccaro-an-incredible-life-in-photography/

http://cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/03/04/viewing-world-war-ii-through-a-soldiers-camera-lens/

http://www.military-history.org/articles/war-photographers/tony-vaccaro-war-photographer.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tony_Vaccaro



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