Tag:war photographer
Born on August 1st, 1912, in Malvern, Melbourne, Damien Peter Parer was a war photographer and cameraman. He was the youngest of eight children from John Arthur Parer, a hotelkeeper from Spain, and his wife Teresa, who was born in Victoria. Parer grew up on King Island, where his father ran the King Island Hotel.
Early Years
In the mid-1930s, a chance meeting between his father and the pioneering Australian film-makers Charles and Elsa Chauvel led to a job with the crew of the feature film Heritage, and later, he was to work as a cameraman with them and Frank Hurley on their famous feature, Forty Thousand Horsemen.
While working as a studio photographer for various employers, Parer created home movies and documentaries during breaks from feature films.. Notably, he worked alongside Max Dupain, who was married to Olive Cotton at the time. Together, the trio established a close friendship and collaborative partnership.
In 1938, Parer was in charge of filming “This Place Australia,” a short film that showcased the poems of Henry Lawson and Banjo Paterson in two parts. Parer’s camera work, heavily influenced by Tasman, Arthur Higgins, and Errol Hind, was most innovative when he adapted the styles of Australian still photographers to motion pictures. For example, he emulated Dupain’s cityscapes when portraying Sydney. He also drew inspiration from the pictorialists’ use of Australian light in landscape compositions when filming the Blue Mountains.

WWII Middle East
In January of 1940, as a photographer with the Commonwealth Department of Information, Parer embarked on a journey to the Middle East alongside the Australian Imperial Force. While on board the gunboat H.M.S. Ladybird, he captured footage of the bombardment of Bardia, Libya, in January 1941. Together with Frank Hurley, he documented the Australian assault on Tobruk in January. Shortly after, he joined ‘C’ Company, 2nd/11th Battalion, as they attacked the Derna airfield, where he filmed his first motion picture of infantry advancing under fire.

During the Greek (April) and Syrian (June-July) campaigns, as well as the Tobruk siege (April-December), Parer primarily took motion pictures with a few stills. He even filmed an air raid while flying with the Australian crew of a Royal Air Force Blenheim bomber. His exceptional work was frequently featured in newsreels, and his name became widely recognised.

WWII – New Guinea
After Pearl Harbour, Damien was recalled from the Middle East to cover New Guinea. In 1942, against Department of Information orders, he went to the Kokoda Track with the first units of the Australian Infantry Forces. It was a bitter campaign fought under the harshest of conditions where the enemy melted into the jungle.

Damien returned to Sydney with 800ft of film and hand-delivered the precious images to Ken Hall. “Kokoda Front Line!” brought the real nature of jungle warfare to the audiences back home. The film earned Damien and Cinesound Australia’s first Academy Award.
Parer’s footage became famous in 1943 when he was featured in Cinesound newsreels such as Men of Timor and The Bismarck Convoy Smashed. His most impressive work is Assault on Salamaua. However, he was unhappy with his salary and allowances. Additionally, he believed that the Department of Information had treated his colleagues, George Silk and Alan Anderson, unfairly. As a result, he resigned in August and joined Paramount News, where he covered American operations. He married Elizabeth Marie Cotter, a 22-year-old clerk, on March 23rd 1944, at St Mary’s Catholic Church in North Sydney.

Final Assignment
During the invasion of Peleliu Island in the Palau group in September of that year, Parer was capturing soldiers’ expressions as they went into action. Tragically, he was killed by a Japanese machine gunner while walking backwards behind a tank. He was buried in the Ambon War cemetery and was mentioned in dispatches. His wife, Elizbeth Cotter, survived him, and their son was born the following year.

Parer was more than just a combat cameraman and propagandist. His films told stories about the human condition, reflecting his extensive knowledge of cinema theory, particularly the ideas of John Grierson.
The photographs captured by Parer have become an integral part of the Anzac legend. These include a caped soldier crossing a stream and a Salvation Army officer lighting a cigarette for a wounded digger.

Yet, despite his accomplishments, Damien Parer remained humble and deeply committed to his Catholic faith. Fellow war photographer and friend Osmar White fondly remembered his infectious laugh, which White described as a booming bass hoot. He also noted Parer’s distinctive physical features: a tall yet stooped figure with black hair and sallow skin.
An exhibition entitled Still Action, showcasing Parer’s work, was sponsored by the Orange Regional Art Gallery and the Australian War Memorial in Canberra and toured Australia between 1997 and 1999.
Gerda Taro was a German-born war photographer best known for her coverage of the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s. Born Gerta Pohorylle in Stuttgart, Germany, she was professionally known as Gerda Taro. She was one of the first female war photographers and is considered a pioneer in the field. Unfortunately, she was also the first woman war photographer to die in the field.
Early Life
Pohorylle was born to a middle-class Jewish family on August 1st, 1910. In 1929, with her father’s business failing due to economic conditions in Germany, the family moved to Leipzig, seeking a fresh start.
As Germany descended further into economic and political chaos, antisemitism intensified. In 1933 she was arrested after distributing anti-Nazi leaflets. At age 23, to escape Hitler’s Germany and the persecution of the Jews, she fled to France, joining the thousands of political and intellectual exiles also seeking refuge in the country. Her parents also left for Palestine, and her brothers went to England. She never saw her family again.
Inventing Robert Capa

In Paris, Pohorylle met Endre Friedmann, a Hungarian jew and became his assistant. Friedmann taught her photography, and they fell in love. In 1936 they invented the pseudonym Robert Capa for Friedman, and Friedmann claimed to be his agent. Both Friedman and Pohorylle took news photographs and sold them as the work of the non-existent American photographer Robert Capa. The ruse was a way of overcoming the rising antisemitism in Europe and breaking into the lucrative American market with a more commercial name.

The name Capa came from Friedmann’s Budapest street nickname “Cápa”, which means “Shark” in Hungarian. However, their secret did not last long, and Friedmann then officially adopted the more commercial name “Capa” as his own. Meanwhile, Pohorylle took the name Gerda Taro. Her name came from avant-garde Japanese artist Tarō Okamoto and Swedish actress Greta Garbo. Robert Capa and Gerda Taro worked together as photojournalists to cover the events surrounding the coming-to-power of the Popular Front in 1930s France.
Spanish Civil War

Just two weeks after the outbreak of the Spanish civil war, the couple moved to Barcelona, arriving in Barcelona on August 5th 1936. Over the next twelve months, Taro photographed the civilian population’s suffering and soldiers on the frontline. In February 1937, Taro and Capa travelled to the Andalusian coast and the city of Malaga, covering the thousands of civilians fleeing a nationalist advance. In May, she photographed the civilian population after they had endured the nightly bombing of Valencia.

Battle of Brunette
The battle of Brunete was pivotal for the Spanish civil war. General Franco’s forces had retaken the town, and the republican troops were retreating. General Walters warned Taro to get out of Brunette as her safety could not be guaranteed. However, Taro refused to leave and continued shooting. as bombs fell and planes strafed the ground. Witnesses said she was smiling and taking photo after photo, which she said were her “best pictures yet”.

Running out of film, she hopped onto the running board of General Walters’ car carrying wounded soldiers. Unfortunately, an out of control tank crashed into the side of the car and crushed her abdomen. Nevertheless, she was still conscious when she arrived at the British hospital in El Escorial. New Zealand surgeon Dr Douglas Jolly operated on her. However, she passed away that night.

Epilogue
Gerda Taro had been due to return to France the next day. Unfortunately, her photographs of the battle and equipment disappeared soon after the collision with the tank. Taro was considered a martyr to the anti-fascist movement, and the French communist party provided her with a magnificent funeral that drew thousands of people; she was laid to rest at Pere Lachaise Cemetary in Paris on what would have been her 27th birthday.