Life Magazine / Sovfoto - Sin titulo





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Specialist in travel literature and pre-1600 rare prints with 28 years experience.
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Description from the seller
Life Magazine (archival photograph)
- Untitled
Silver gelatin print - With stamp and provenance and batch certificates.
Wonderful collection of 31 photographs from my private collection. It comprises 27 photographs measuring 25 cm high × 21 cm wide, two photographs 21 cm × 20 cm, and finally two photographs 26 cm × 22 cm.
All the photographs bear the stamp of the Enrique Meneses Foundation, and some of Life Magazine.
31 photographs very well preserved from a very important period of the old Soviet Union under the leadership of Nikita Khrushchev and Stalin.
No photographs that form part of history, and this makes it a unique collection.
ENRIQUE MENESES
One of the pioneers of Spanish photojournalism, a master of photographers and journalists.
Born in Madrid in 1929, Enrique Meneses lived in France, Portugal, Egypt and the United States, and traveled to India, the Middle East, sub-Saharan Africa, Cuba, etc. etc. An exceptional witness to the most important events of the second half of the twentieth century.
He secured world exclusives, published in the most powerful media. He was a journalist through and through. He disliked being called 'master'.
He spent part of his childhood in Paris, where he experienced the German occupation during World War II. At the end of the war he moved with his family to Portugal, while his father flew to Buenos Aires to work as a journalist. He completed the French and Spanish Baccalaureate.
He studied Law at the University of Salamanca and Madrid. He took special courses for journalism professionals, although he had already published his first report in 1947 on the death of Manolete. It was published in numerous Latin American newspapers. He founded an agency, Prensa Universal, which was closed a year after its birth for having published articles by Jesús Galíndez, the Basque exile in New York.
In 1954 he moved to Egypt where he collaborated with the local press. In 1956 he crossed Africa from Cairo to Cape Town and back to Cairo. On his return to the Egyptian capital, in 1956, he covered the Suez Canal War for Paris Match and reports.
In 1958 he moved to Cuba, where he became the first reporter to live for four months with the Cuban revolutionaries in Sierra Maestra. There he met Fidel Castro and Che Guevara. A few months before leaving the island, where he was jailed by Batista’s police for a week, he managed to send his report on the Cuban revolution to Paris Match.
The article caused a sensation worldwide.
He was a correspondent in India and also in the Middle East for seven years for Paris Match. For two years he worked in Europe as a freelancer and founded the cooperative Delta Press. In 1962 he moved to New York where he remained a freelancer until November 1963, the assassination of President Kennedy. In 1964 he founded the agency Fotopress for the Prensa Española Group. On Televisión Española he directed the program "A toda Plana" (1964 and 1965). In 1972 he became general director of ABC de Las Américas. In 1973 he returned to Televisión Española to work on the program "Los Reporteros". He directed the Spanish edition of Lui and in 1976 he became director of the Spanish edition of Playboy.
In 1982 he created and served as director of the program Los Aventureros on Radio Nacional.
In 1983 he produced the series "Robinson en África" for TVE.
Life Magazine (archival photograph)
- Untitled
Silver gelatin print - With stamp and provenance and batch certificates.
Wonderful collection of 31 photographs from my private collection. It comprises 27 photographs measuring 25 cm high × 21 cm wide, two photographs 21 cm × 20 cm, and finally two photographs 26 cm × 22 cm.
All the photographs bear the stamp of the Enrique Meneses Foundation, and some of Life Magazine.
31 photographs very well preserved from a very important period of the old Soviet Union under the leadership of Nikita Khrushchev and Stalin.
No photographs that form part of history, and this makes it a unique collection.
ENRIQUE MENESES
One of the pioneers of Spanish photojournalism, a master of photographers and journalists.
Born in Madrid in 1929, Enrique Meneses lived in France, Portugal, Egypt and the United States, and traveled to India, the Middle East, sub-Saharan Africa, Cuba, etc. etc. An exceptional witness to the most important events of the second half of the twentieth century.
He secured world exclusives, published in the most powerful media. He was a journalist through and through. He disliked being called 'master'.
He spent part of his childhood in Paris, where he experienced the German occupation during World War II. At the end of the war he moved with his family to Portugal, while his father flew to Buenos Aires to work as a journalist. He completed the French and Spanish Baccalaureate.
He studied Law at the University of Salamanca and Madrid. He took special courses for journalism professionals, although he had already published his first report in 1947 on the death of Manolete. It was published in numerous Latin American newspapers. He founded an agency, Prensa Universal, which was closed a year after its birth for having published articles by Jesús Galíndez, the Basque exile in New York.
In 1954 he moved to Egypt where he collaborated with the local press. In 1956 he crossed Africa from Cairo to Cape Town and back to Cairo. On his return to the Egyptian capital, in 1956, he covered the Suez Canal War for Paris Match and reports.
In 1958 he moved to Cuba, where he became the first reporter to live for four months with the Cuban revolutionaries in Sierra Maestra. There he met Fidel Castro and Che Guevara. A few months before leaving the island, where he was jailed by Batista’s police for a week, he managed to send his report on the Cuban revolution to Paris Match.
The article caused a sensation worldwide.
He was a correspondent in India and also in the Middle East for seven years for Paris Match. For two years he worked in Europe as a freelancer and founded the cooperative Delta Press. In 1962 he moved to New York where he remained a freelancer until November 1963, the assassination of President Kennedy. In 1964 he founded the agency Fotopress for the Prensa Española Group. On Televisión Española he directed the program "A toda Plana" (1964 and 1965). In 1972 he became general director of ABC de Las Américas. In 1973 he returned to Televisión Española to work on the program "Los Reporteros". He directed the Spanish edition of Lui and in 1976 he became director of the Spanish edition of Playboy.
In 1982 he created and served as director of the program Los Aventureros on Radio Nacional.
In 1983 he produced the series "Robinson en África" for TVE.
