Description

Eve Arnold took extended trips to China in 1979, totalling five months, in which she was able to travel freely with almost unlimited access. She followed her own itinerary some 40,000 miles back and forth across the mainland, accompanied only by her interpreter. The result is an incomparably complete and beautiful photographic portrait of China that shows the experience of those living in the vast and diverse land.. Pictured here, horse training for the militia. Inner Mongolia, China. 1979.

If you are careful with people, they will offer you part of themselves. That is the big secret.

Eve Arnold
© Eve Arnold | Magnum Photos

Eve Arnold was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to Russian immigrant parents. She began photographing in 1946, while working at a photo-finishing plant in New York City, and then studied photography in 1948 with Alexei Brodovitch at the New School for Social Research in New York.

Joining Magnum in 1957 as the agency’s first female photographer, Arnold captured some of the most significant individuals and groups of the era. She is well known for her intimate portraits of Marilyn Monroe, with whom she became good friends.

Other significant projects include her documentation of the Nation of Islam and the black fashion world of 1950s Harlem, as well as her extensive work in China, for which she received a Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Society of Magazine Photographers. Eve Arnold died in January 2012.

© Eve Arnold | Magnum Photos

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