Title: | V.J. Day, Times Square, New York, 1945 |
Inventory#: | EISENA000003 |
Size: | 18" x 112" |
Frame Size: | 24" x 18" |
Medium: | Silver Gelatin Print |
Price: | Price On Request |
Date: 08/14/1945 Location: New York, New York
Edition 250/AP24
Eisenstaedt was born in Dirschau, West Prussia; now part of Poland. He came to America in 1935. He was one of the original staff photographers for LIFE magazine when it was launched in 1936. Pictured here is probably the most iconographic image associated with LIFE, photojournalism, and World War II. Eisenstaedt recounts how he got the shot: “I was walking through the crowds on V-J Day, looking for pictures. I noticed a sailor coming my way. He was grabbing every female he could find and kissing them all – young girls and old ladies alike… The sailor came along, grabbed the nurse, and bent down to kiss her. Now if this girl hadn’t been a nurse, if she’d been dressed in dark clothes, I wouldn’t have had a picture. People tell me that when I’m in heaven, they will remember this picture.”
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Alfred Eisenstaedt (1898-1995)
Photographer
Alfred Eisenstaedt, or “Eisie,” as his friends called him, was born of well-
to-do parents in Dirchau, West Prussia (now part of Poland), in 1898.
As a boy, Alfred enjoyed listening to symphonies and even thought of studying to become a musician. But on his thirteenth birthday an uncle presented him with a gift; this folding Eastman Kodak Number Three led Eisie to his lifelong dedication to photography. After being drafted into the German army and recovering from a crippling war injury, Eisie became a familiar figure at the local art museums. There he studied the paintings of the masters, particularly with an eye to their handling of composition and lighting.
By 1929 Eisie was earning more as a freelance photographer than he was as a salesman. Within days of deciding to take photos full-time, Pacific and Atlantic Photos (later the Associated Press) sent him on assignment to Stockholm. He continued to build a name for himself by taking pictures of topical interest. In 1932, Eisie bought his first Leica, the 35mm camera that was revolutionizing photojournalism.
In 1935 Eisie left Europe, arriving in New York at the end of November. After presenting some of his recent work to executive editor Daniel Longwell of LIFE, Eisie was hired. Within a few months Eisie had become one of the four staff photographers for the new magazine. Considered one of the foremost photojournalists of this century, Eisenstaedt has been given a multitude of exhibitions, awards, and medals.