Probably the titled photo “BiAfrican 1969” is the most famous of this photographer: Donald McCullin. Simply they have that googlearla so that it appears on the screen of his computer. Now the warning goes: it is terribly heartbreaking.
Donald McCullin, is a British photographer recognized principally by his photo of war. His career of photojournalism, which began in 1959, has specialized in the record of the secondary layers of the society. His photos have represented the unemployed men, the oppressed ones and the poor.
His first work, published in 1958, was painting the portrait to a band of its own street, in the north of London. During the 60s and 70s McCullin worked for Sunday Times, covering events of international importance, like the war of Vietnam. McCullin covered different ecological disasters and regions desolated by the war. If his work had not been so removedor probably the British government would not have prohibited him in 1982 to cover the war of the Malvinas.
(I resided …)
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