Gerda Taro
Gerda Taro (Gerta Pohorylle; 1 August 1910 – 26 July 1937) was a German-born photojournalist of Polish-Jewish descent who gained prominence for her frontline coverage of the Republican side in the Spanish Civil War.[1][2] Born in Stuttgart to a middle-class family, she studied in Leipzig before fleeing Nazi persecution to Paris in 1933, where she adopted her professional pseudonym, learned photography, and in 1934 met fellow émigré photographer Robert Capa, becoming his romantic and professional partner.[3][4] Together, they developed innovative techniques in war photography, producing dynamic, close-range images that captured the human cost of conflict and influenced the genre's evolution toward immediacy and emotional impact.[5][6] By 1936, Taro had established her independence, freelancing for publications like Vu and documenting militias, refugees, and battles with a focus on Republican forces against Franco's Nationalists.[3] Her career ended tragically at age 26 during the Battle of Brunete, when she was fatally injured in an accident involving a retreating Republican tank sideswiping the vehicle she was riding on, marking her as the first female photojournalist to die while covering active combat—though the incident's circumstances have sometimes been romanticized beyond the empirical account of friendly-fire mishap amid chaotic retreat.[7][8][1]