Occupation Photographer Years active 1992–present | Name Jan Grarup Role Photographer | |
![]() | ||
Born 2 December 1968 (age 55) ( 1968-12-02 ) Artwork I Just Want to Dunk, Bam earthquake People also search for Kamilla Walsoe, Mette Walsted Vestergaard, Zasha Sekjaer |
5 rules of photography by jan grarup
Jan Grarup (born 1968) is a Danish photojournalist who has worked both as a staff photographer and as a freelance, specializing in war and conflict photography. He has won many prizes including the World Press Photo award for his coverage of the war in Kosovo.
Contents
- 5 rules of photography by jan grarup
- Jan grarup commerce culture workshop in kabul
- Early life
- Career
- Assessment
- Awards
- References

Jan grarup commerce culture workshop in kabul
Early life

Grarup was born in Kvistgaard, not far from Helsingør, in the north of the Danish island of Sealand. He got his first camera when he was 13 and began to develop black and white photographs. At the age of 15 he took a photograph of a traffic accident and sent it in to the local newspaper Helsingør Dagblad where it was published. When he was 19, he spent his Easter holidays in Belfast at the time of the troubles, gaining an appetite for conflicts.

After studying journalism and photography at the Danish School of Journalism in Aarhus from 1989 to 1991, he became first a trainee, then a full-time photographer with the Danish tabloid Ekstra Bladet.
Career

In 1991, the year he graduated, Grarup won the Danish Press Photographer of the Year award, a prize he would receive on several further occasions. In 1993, he moved to Berlin for a year, working as a freelance photographer for Danish newspapers and magazines.
During his career, Jan Grarup has covered many wars and conflicts around the world including the Gulf War, the Rwandan Genocide, the Siege of Sarajevo and the Palestinian uprising against Israel in 2000. His coverage of the conflict between Palestine and Israel gave rise to two series: The Boys of Ramallah, which also earned him the POY World Understanding Award in 2002, followed by The Boys from Hebron.
On his website, Grarup explains that his work reflects his belief "in photojournalism’s role as an instrument of witness and memory to incite change, and the necessity of telling the stories of people who are rendered powerless to tell their own".
His book, Shadowland (2006), presents his work during the 12 years he spent in Kashmir, Sierra Leone, Chechnya, Rwanda, Kosovo, Slovakia, Ramallah, Hebron, Iraq, Iran, and Darfur. In the words of Foto8's review, it is intensely personal, deeply felt, and immaculately composed. His second book, Darfur: A Silent Genocide, was published in 2009.
After leaving his post at Politiken in the autumn of 2009, he joined the small Danish photographic firm Das Büro in January 2010 where he concentrated on the national market. He continues his international work with the NOOR agency in Amsterdam, of which he is a cofounder.
Recent photographs include those of the earthquake in Haiti taken for Time and Dagbladet Information. In late 2011, Garup covered the refugee camp in Dadaab, Kenya.
Assessment
Per Folkver, Picture Editor in Chief of the Copenhagen daily Politiken, where Grarup has worked for most of his career, explains that Grarup "has developed a kind of humanistic touch, a human sense... Instead of just taking the picture, he is trying to get behind the scenes. He is concerned about what he is seeing and doing longer stories and returning to the same places."
Awards
Among the many awards Grarup has won are: