Alfred Eisenstaedt (1898-1995), known as the “father of photojournalism,” was a German-American photojournalist of Jewish descent. His work revolutionized the way stories were told through photographs.
Eisenstaedt worked for nearly seven decades. His innovative use of the 35mm Leica camera, his preference for natural light, and his mastery of candid photography elevated photojournalism to an art form and influenced generations of photographers, emphasizing spontaneity, human emotion, and narrative depth in visual storytelling.
Through his lens, Eisenstaedt documented historical events, iconic figures, and everyday moments, making photography a powerful medium for conveying the essence of the 20th century.
Alfred Eisenstaedt was born on December 6, 1898, in Dirschau (now Tczew, Poland), then part of West Prussia in the German Empire. Coming from a Jewish family, Alfred moved with his parents to Berlin in 1906, where he spent most of his childhood. At the age of 11, Eisenstaedt received his first camera, an Eastman Kodak folding roll film camera, as a gift from his uncle, and this ignited a lifelong passion for photography.
In 1914, aged just 16, Alfred joined an artillery unit of the German army and served until 1918, being seriously wounded by shrapnel in both legs during the Battle of Flanders.
After the war, Eisenstaedt returned to Berlin and in the 1920s he worked as a belt and button salesman to earn a living. However, his interest in photography remained as a hobby. He began experimenting with freelance work in 1928, selling his first photograph to the Berlin newspaper Der Weltspiegel for three marks. This modest success encouraged him to take photography more seriously, and by 1929 he had become a staff photographer for the Berlin agency Pacific and Atlantic Photos, which was later acquired by the Associated Press in 1931. During this period, he also collaborated with the Illustrierte Zeitung of the Ullstein Verlag, honing his skills in shooting dynamic scenes.
Among Eisenstaedt’s early assignments was covering the Nobel Prize ceremony in Stockholm in 1929, which marked his beginnings in professional photojournalism. He quickly gained recognition for his ability to capture informal, natural moments, a style that distinguished him from the more formal portraits of the era.
In the early 1930s, Eisenstaedt’s career flourished in Europe as he mastered the latest 35mm camera technology, particularly the Leica, which offered greater mobility and spontaneity compared to the bulky large-format cameras. This innovation played a key role in the development of photojournalism, allowing photographers to work discreetly in dynamic environments. Eisenstaedt was among the first Europeans to pioneer this approach, bringing a new level of intimacy and immediacy to news photography.
Among Eisenstaedt’s most notable early works is a 1932 photograph of a waiter on skates named René Breguet serving drinks at the Grand Hotel in St. Moritz, Switzerland. To achieve sharpness, Eisenstaedt placed a chair on the ice as a focal point and used a Miroflex camera, capturing the waiter’s delicate balance in a whimsical but technically accurate image.
Another iconic photograph from 1933 shows Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels scowling at Eisenstaedt during a League of Nations conference in Geneva, Switzerland. Goebbels’ expression changed from a smile to anger when he learned of Eisenstaedt’s Jewish background, reflecting the rising tensions in Europe.
In 1934, Eisenstaedt photographed the first meeting of Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini in Italy, as well as the lavish audience at the premiere at La Scala in Milan, showing tuxedo-clad spectators in tiered boxes. These images highlighted his versatility, from political intrigue to cultural elegance.
However, the escalation of Nazi oppression forced Eisenstaedt and his family to emigrate to the United States in 1935. Settling in New York, he became a naturalized American citizen and joined PIX Publishing, an agency founded by his fellow émigrés, and worked freelance for other publications, including Harper’s Bazaar, Vogue, and Town & Country. It was then that his outspoken style emerged.
Eisenstaedt was known for his relaxed approach to photography with his small Leica camera, often shooting from 10 feet to infinity, capturing real emotion without complicated settings. He once said, “They don’t take me too seriously with my little camera. I don’t come as a photographer. I come as a friend.”
In 1936, Eisenstaedt’s career took a monumental turn when Henry Luce invited him to become one of the first staff photographers for the newly founded Life Magazine, along with Margaret Bourke-White, Peter Stackpole, and Thomas McAvoy. Eisenstaedt’s assignments for Life ranged from celebrity portraits to wartime documentary scenes.
Over the next 36 years, until his retirement in 1972, Eisenstaedt made a huge contribution to the magazine’s success, creating nearly 2,500 photo essays and gracing 92 covers. His work helped define a golden era of American photojournalism, transforming Life Magazine into a visual chronicle of global events and human experience for its millions of readers.
Eisenstaedt’s portfolio is a tapestry of 20th-century history, with images that blend art and journalism. His most famous work, “V-Day in Times Square” (1945), taken on August 14 in New York City, depicts a U.S. Navy sailor passionately kissing a nurse as Japan’s surrender is celebrated. Captured on a Leica IIIa, this spontaneous moment symbolized postwar joy and became an enduring icon, although the subjects – later identified as George Mendonça and Edith Shane – remained unknown for decades.
Eisenstaedt captured the devastation in Hiroshima, Japan, in December 1945, including a mother and child in the wasteland at the site of the atomic bomb, highlighting the human suffering from the Enola Gay attack, which killed an estimated 70,000 people.
In 1951, Eisenstaedt photographed British Prime Minister Winston Churchill showing his “V for Victory” sign in Liverpool, England, despite Churchill’s reputation as a difficult subject, which once dictated Eisenstaedt’s camera placement.
Among Eisenstaedt’s notable works are a 1940 photograph of the final sculptural depiction of George Washington’s face on Mount Rushmore, South Dakota, which reflects the monument’s creation from 1927 to 1941, and a 1943 view of New York City’s Penn Station, reminiscent of mid-century urban life.
Eisenstaedt’s celebrity portraits were intimate and candid. In 1938, he photographed actresses Hedy Lamarr and Bette Davis (the latter for the cover of Life Magazine on January 23, 1939). His photograph of Marilyn Monroe on her patio in 1953 conveyed vulnerability, while his shot of Sophia Loren on the set of “An Italian Marriage” in 1964 captured her mischievous dignity. He also photographed Albert Einstein at Princeton in 1948, Ernest Hemingway in 1952 (who once threatened to throw him overboard), and artist Thomas Hart Benton in 1969.
Political figures figured prominently in Eisenstaedt’s collection of work – Senator John F. Kennedy with his daughter Caroline at home in 1960 after his nomination for president, as well as Jackie Kennedy reading to Caroline in Hyannis Port that same year.
Eisenstaedt excelled at writing compelling stories about people. A 1936 photograph of ballerinas rehearsing at George Balanchine’s School of American Ballet demonstrated grace under pressure. In 1938, student nurses lined the stairwell railings of Roosevelt Hospital in New York City, illustrating the evolution of nursing as a profession. His 1963 photograph, “Children in a Puppet Theatre” in the Tuileries Garden in Paris, which depicts children watching “St. George and the Dragon,” sold for $55,200 at Sotheby’s in 2006.
Unique subjects included tattooed yakuza members in Japan (after 1945) and pearl-fishing ama women in Japan in 1946, Helen Martini hand-feeding tiger cubs in her Bronx apartment in 1944, where she became the first female zookeeper. A 1972 photograph of six generations of the Steele family – from a 10-month-old baby to a 100-year-old great-great-grandmother – highlighted the family lineage. Other gems include a 1950 drum school graduate playing with children at the University of Michigan, and 1937 model Janet MacLeod in a Lilly Daché hat and veil.
Eisenstaedt’s contributions to the development of photography were both technical and artistic. He championed the portability of the 35mm Leica lens, which allowed for candid shots in natural light without flash, which he avoided in order to maintain authenticity.
By 1944, Life magazine called him “the dean of modern miniature camera experts.” Eisenstaedt emphasized the creation of a relaxed atmosphere. This method influenced modern street and documentary photography, prioritizing emotional truth over staged compositions.
Eisenstaedt was a versatile artist, not limited to specific fields, making him ideal for a variety of assignments. His impartial yet insightful eye created images that were both historical documents and artistic expressions, developing photojournalism as a narrative art form.
Even after his career ended in 1972, Eisenstaedt continued to photograph into his nineties, most notably Bill Clinton on Martha’s Vineyard in 1993. He died on August 23, 1995, at the age of 96, in Oak Bluffs, Massachusetts.
The photographer’s legacy has been preserved through books such as “Eisenstaedt: A Memoir” (1990), which collects his work from his time working in Germany in the 1930s, with commentary on his career, featuring politicians, scholars, and children. There have also been exhibitions of his work, such as “Alfred Eisenstaedt: Life and Legacy” at the San Diego Museum of Art, “Mid-Century Master: The Photography of Alfred Eisenstaedt” at the Hillwood Museum (2019, nearly 50 photographs), and a retrospective of 1954-1955, celebrating 25 years in photography.
Eisenstaedt’s influence and achievements are highlighted by his awards: the “Infinity Master of Photography” award from the International Center of Photography (1988), the National Medal of Arts from President George H.W. Bush (1989), the “International Understanding” award for outstanding achievement, and posthumous recognition as “Photojournalist of the Century” by The Digital Journalist (1999).
Eisenstaedt not only documented history, but also elevated photography to the level of expressive art, inspiring photojournalists to capture the human spirit with empathy and precision. His timeless images continue to shape our perception of the world, proving that a single frame can tell a profound story.