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Max Alpert

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Occupation
  
Photographer

Known for
  
Combat

Role
  
Photographer

Name
  
Max Alpert

Spouse(s)
  
Glafira Belits-Geiman


Max Alpert Maks Vladimirovi Al39pert Works on Sale at Auction

Born
  
18 March 1899
Simferopol, Russian Empire

Died
  
November 30, 1980, Moscow, Russia

Awards
  
World Press Photo Award for General News, Honored Cultural Worker of the RSFSR

Max Vladimirovich Alpert (Russian: Макс Владимирович Альперт; 18 March 1899 – 30 November 1980) was a prominent Soviet photographer, who was mostly known for his frontiline work during World War II.

Max Alpert Max Alpert PhotoPoint

Biography

Max Alpert URSS en Construction Combinats de la Boucherie Max ALPERT

Before World War I, Alpert studied in Odessa, together with his brother Mikhail Alperin, and after the war worked as a photographer for Rabochaya Gazeta (Workers Newspaper) in Moscow. In the 1930s he photographed numerous construction sites of the Soviet Union. During that time Sergei Eisenstein stayed with him at the Fergana Canal and was impressed by his passion to photography. In parallel, Alpert worked for Pravda, where he was known as a prolific portrait photographer. During World War II, he made a number of iconic photographs at the Soviet frontlines, and also documented military events in Prague and Berlin. For his work during the war he was awarded the Order of the Red Star (1943), Order of the Patriotic War (1945) and Order of the Red Banner of Labour. After the war, he worked at RIA Novosti, where he compiled a famous photoalbum of Nikolai Amosov. Examples of his images are held in the Sovfoto archive.


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Max Alpert Max Alpert Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Max Alpert History of Art History of Photography

Max Alpert LuminousLint Image

References

Max Alpert Wikipedia