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Robert Capa: Magyar riport, 1948

2026-04-09T11:00:00.000Z  -  2026-08-23T16:00:00.000Z

Robert Capa visited Budapest once in 1948. The photographs he took during that visit have NEVER been seen by the general public in Hungary until now, but anyone interested can view them at the Capa Center’s newest exhibition!

Apr
09
-
Aug
23

Schedule

The Robert Capa Contemporary Photography Center cordially invites you and your friends to the opening of its upcoming exhibition.

Opening on Wednesday, April 8, 2026, 6 pm

Greetings by Orsolya KŐRÖSI managing director, Capa Center

Opening remarks by Anita KISS-HEGYI State Secretary for Cultural Relations

Curated by Éva FISLI

Location: Robert Capa Contemporary Photograhy Center

1065 Budapest, Nagymező utca 8.

On view:

April 9 – August23, 2026

Tuesday–Friday: 1 pm – 6 pm

Saturday–Sunday: 10 am – 6 pm

Closed on Mondays and public holidays.

The exhibition features pictures from the collection of the International Center of Photography in New York.

“The most professional American tourists call themselves foreign correspondents, and when they have been born outside the United States, their favorite subject is revisiting. I have revisited Budapest because I happen to have been born there, and because the place offered only a short season for revisiting,” wrote Capa in 1952.

The short season allowed by Hungary for the photojournalist’s return lasted from early September to mid-October 1948. The illustrated reportage on the visit was published under the title “Conversation in Budapest” in the November 1949 issue of the American magazine Holiday.

Robert Capa wrote several entertaining reports on European tourist paradises for the imagined readers of the full-color monthly travel and luxury life magazine launched after World War II. “Conversation in Budapest,” however, is an exception among the photojournalist’s light-hearted pieces written for the wealthy, as it touches on the homeland Capa left behind in the 1930s and the impossibility of ever returning.

The exhibition presents this impossible mission, placing the former Endre Friedmann back into the ruined setting of his youth.

In 1948, Robert Capa is already 35 years old, an American citizen, a recipient of the Medal of Freedom, John Steinbeck’s travel companion and collaborator on what would become A Russian Journal; he is part of a lively international network of professionals and comrades. He is the co-founder of the independent photo agency known as Magnum. He speaks out in the New York Herald Tribune against the Iron Curtain, the Cold War, incitement, and hostility.

His return home in the fall of 1948 is not the first since he left seventeen years earlier, but it is his longest stay in Hungary since 1931—and he would never return again.

The following year, a few of his photos taken here were featured in an exhibition and some of them appeared in foreign magazines, but he never published a book-length “report on Hungary,” unlike in the case of the projects he collaborated on with other authors in that period. Through the available photographs and the contact sheets on display here for the first time, this exhibition explores the themes that the already world-famous photojournalist was interested in and wanted to work on.

Éva Fisli

curator

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