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Recognized universally as one of today's finest image makers, Steve McCurry has won many of
photography's top awards. Best known for his evocative color photography, McCurry captures
the essence of human struggle and joy in the finest documentary tradition. Member of Magnum
Photos since 1986, McCurry has searched and found the unforgettable. Many of his breathtaking
images have become modern day icons. Born in Philadelphia, McCurry graduated cum laude from
the College of Arts and Architecture at the Pennsylvania State University. After working at a
newspaper for two years, he left for India to freelance. It was in India that McCurry learned to
watch and wait on life. If you wait, he realized, people will forget your camera and the soul will
drift up into view.
His career was launched when, disguised in native garb, he crossed the Pakistan border into rebel-
controlled Afghanistan just before the Russian invasion. When he emerged, he had rolls of film
sewn into his clothes and images that would be published around the world as among the first to
show the conflict there. His coverage won the Robert Capa Gold Medal for Best Photographic
Reporting from Abroad, an award dedicated to photographers exhibiting exceptional courage and
enterprise. He is the recipient of numerous awards, including Magazine Photographer of the Year,
awarded by the National Press Photography Association. This was the same year in which he
won an unprecedented four first prizes in the World Press Photo Contest. He has won the Olivier
Rebbot Memorial Award twice.
Steve McCurry has covered many areas of international and civil conflict, including the Iran-Iraq
war, the disintegration of the former Yugoslavia, Beirut, Cambodia, the Philippines, the Gulf War,
and continuing coverage of Afghanistan. He focuses on the human consequences of war, not only
showing what war impresses on the landscape, but rather on the human face. McCurry's work
has been featured in every major magazine in the world and frequently appears in National
Geographic magazine with recent articles on Tibet, Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen, and the temples of
Angkor Wat, Cambodia. McCurry is driven by an innate curiosity and sense of wonder about the
world and everyone in it. He has the uncanny ability to cross boundaries of language and culture
to capture stories of human experience.
"Most of my images are grounded in people. I look for the unguarded moment, the essential
soul
peeking out, experience etched on a person's face. I try to convey what it is like to be that person,
a person caught in a broader landscape, that you could call the human condition." A high point
in
his career was the rediscovery of the previously unidentified Afghan refugee girl that many have
described as the most recognizable photograph in the world today. When McCurry finally located
Sharbat Gula after almost two decades, he said, "Her skin is weathered; there are wrinkles now,
but she is as striking as she was all those years ago." McCurry returned from an extended
assignment in China on September 10, 2001. His coverage at Ground Zero on September 11 is a
testament to the heroism and nobility of the people of New York City. You felt the horror and
immediately, instinctively understood that our lives would never be the same again.
Publications Include:
The Imperial Way (1985), Monsoon (1988), Portraits (1999), South Southeast
(2000),
Sanctuary (2002), The Path to Buddha: A Tibetan Pilgrimage (2003), Steve McCurry
(2005),
Looking East (2006), In the Shadows of Mountains (2007)
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