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Chim: Photography's forgotten hero

He was one of the best photographers of his era, and helped found the influential Magnum agency. So why has he been neglected for so long?

April 3, 2013 16:30
Chim’ s famous image of a wedding under an improvised chupah propped up with guns and pitchforks, Israel, 1952. Photo: © Chim (David Seymour)/Magnum

ByMelanie Abrams , Melanie Abrams

3 min read

Dawid Szymin was destined to run his family’s Yiddish and Hebrew publishing house in Warsaw — until he discovered photography.

In truth, he had already strayed from the path mapped out for him by his parents, having opted to study graphic arts in Leipzig and then at the Sorbonne in Paris.

It was in order to fund those studies that he turned to taking pictures. The excitement of capturing workers’s strikes and the rallies of the new left-wing Popular Front in 1930s France proved too much, and all thoughts of the family business were forgotten.

Under the shorter, easier to pronounce name, Chim, he went on to cover the Spanish Civil War, and the rebuilding of post-war Europe and early Israel, in the process helping to shape the golden era of photo-journalism.