A look through the lens of Alfred Eisenstaedt
Photographer Alfred Eisenstaedt was born in 1898 in the city of Dirschau, Germany, which is now in Poland. He began shooting pictures at age 12 when his uncle gave him a camera. “I began clicking madly everything in sight,″ he recalled.
Whether he was photographing ordinary people or great world figures, Eisenstaedt was a master at finding the detail that told the big story. His style was unaffected, naturalistic; he let his subjects speak for themselves.
After serving in World War I, in which he suffered shrapnel injuries, Eisenstaedt went to work as a salesman in Berlin to help out his family, whose department store business had run into hard times.
Three days after quitting as a salesman, he began several years of free-lance work for The Associated Press by heading to Stockholm to photograph writer Thomas Mann at the Nobel Prize ceremonies. His photographs for a couple of German picture magazines and for the news service established his reputation both as a photographer and as a journalist.
When Henry Luce, founder of the Time empire, decided to start a picture magazine, Eisenstaedt was extended an offer and he came to the United States in 1935. While working on the prototype of what would become Life, Luce said, his faith the magazine would succeed was confirmed when he saw Eisenstaedt’s photographs of a sharecropper family in the South.
He found considerable fame at LIFE Magazine after he photographed the iconic V-J Day kiss in Times Square. It became his most well known photo and one of the most famous photos of the 20th century.
This text contains extracts from an Associated Press article, Alfred Eisenstaedt, Master Life Photographer, Dead at 96, first published on August 24, 1995.
The AP Corporate Archives contributed to this blog.