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Pioneering war photographer Gerda Taro's images vandalised in Leipzig

Open-air display of photographs covered in black paint in "politically motivated" attack

Julia Michalska
12 August 2016
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An open-air display of images by the war photographer Gerda Taro has been vandalised in Leipzig, Germany, Monopol reports. The works, which depict scenes of conflict including the Spanish Civil War, were covered in black paint on the night of Wednesday, 3 August.

The exhibition organisers, f/stop festival, say in a statement: “How a work of art is handled in the public space is always a litmus test for the state of a community. Unlike the ‘protected space’ of a museum or gallery, a work in the public realm is under the protection of us all.” The organisers believe the act was “politically motivated” and a police investigation has been launched.

Taro was born Gerta Pohorylle into a German Jewish family in 1910. She escaped the Nazis in 1933, fleeing from Leipzig to Paris where she met the Hungarian photographer Robert Capa (then called André Friedmann). Together they travelled to Spain where they documented the Spanish Civil War. Taro was killed there on assignment in 1937, becoming the first female war photographer to die in action.

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