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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Inge_MorathInge Morath - Wikipedia

    Ingeborg Hermine Morath ( German: [ˈɪŋəbɔrk ˈmoːraːt] ⓘ; 27 May 1923 – 30 January 2002) was an Austrian photographer. [2] . In 1953, she joined the Magnum Photos Agency, founded by top photographers in Paris, and became a full photographer with the agency in 1955.

  2. Inge Morath was born in Graz, Austria, in 1923. After studying languages in Berlin, she became a translator, then a journalist and the Austrian editor for Heute , an Information Service Branch publication based in Munich.

  3. www.ingemorath.orgInge Morath

    Inge Morath was born in Graz, Austria, in 1923. After studying languages in Berlin, she became a translator, then a journalist and the Austrian editor for Heute, an Information Service Branch publication based in Munich.

  4. www.magnumphotos.com › theory-and-practice › inge-morath-in-commemorationInge Morath Remembered | Magnum Photos

    May 26, 2023 · Inge Morath. Persepolis, Iran, 1956. "It was instantly clear to me that from now on I would be a photographer." - Morath eventually picked up a camera in 1951 in Venice. A brief period of rainfall had passed, and a gorgeous afternoon light flooded the city’s rain-soaked streets. Morath was captivated.

  5. www.ingemorath.orgInge Morath

    Inge Morath was an Austrian-born photographer who was associated with Magnum Photos for nearly fifty years. After her death in 2002, the Inge Morath Foundation was established with a limited-term mission to manage Morath’s estate and facilitate the study and appreciation of her contribution to photography.

  6. Inge Morath's photographs of Connecticut accompany a written portrait by her husband, the literary icon Arthur Miller, of their shared rural life together.

  7. Nov 19, 2018 · This book is the first ever full-length biography of Austrian-born American photographer Inge Morath, tracing her life through the prism of her work and archives. Inge Morath overcame an adolescence in Nazi Germany and the trauma of barely surviving World War II to use her camera as a way to enter worlds closed to most women.

  8. Inge Morath: In Her Own Words. I personally arrived slowly at photography. I studied languages at university, took some courses in journalism, worked first as a translator and then as an editor for the Information Services Branch of the occupying American Forces in Salzburg, later in Vienna.

  9. Jan 31, 2002 · Inge Morath, a photographer who brought a whimsical, lyrical touch to her images from travelogues to reportage to portraits, died yesterday at New York Hospital in Manhattan. She was 78 and...

  10. Dec 10, 2018 · Morath, pictured above in Paris in 1964, is the subject of a new biography by Linda Gordon called Inge Morath: Magnum Legacy, published by Prestel and Magnum Foundation.