ISRAEL Falling Loyalist soldier, Cordoba front, Spain, 1936. This is perhaps Robert Capa's most famous photograph. The Essence Of People The late Robert Capa is famous for his photographs of the Spanish Civil War. But Capa, who was born Andre Friedmann in Hungary, also took photos of Israel. These, and others of his work, are on view at the Tel Aviv Museum. HELENA FLUSFEDER Special to The Jewish News A powerful photographic exhibition by Hun- garian-born Robert Capa opened recently at the Tel Aviv Museum. Containing some 200 pho- tographs, the exhibition reveals that although he was generally known as a war photographer, Capa, in fact, captured other aspects of humanity in a unique and moving photo-journalistic style. . While many of the photo- graphs have been seen before, this marks "the first time that a Robert Capa exhibition includes a large number of his photographs taken in Israel between 1948 and 1950," says the exhibit's curator, Micha 68 FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1988 Bar-Am, who adds that no one, not even Capa's brother, Cornell, had realized the ex- tent of the photographer's involvement with Israel. Many of Capa's unpub- lished photographs had been filed away in the form of negatives and contact sheets, and no one had looked at them since 1950 when some had been published in a book, Report from Israel, a col- laboration with American author Irwin Shaw. "The only reason we were able to rediscover them was because this bulk of work was taken care of by Cornell and Edie Capa, the photogra- pher's brother and sister-in- law, and they donated them to the_ museum," says Bar- Am, a personal friend of Cornell Capa. Thgether, Bar-Am and Cor- nell sifted through Capa's work and selected a combi- nation of published and unpublished photographs covering five wars, including Israel's War of Independence. There are some 140 Capa pho- tographs of Israel in the exhibit. Capa's Israeli photographs reflect the struggle for the state's existence; the subse- quent arrival and settlement of immigrants in camps; the historic arrival of illegal immigrants aboard the ship Altalena; and images of the country's leading political figures, including the young Menachem Begin as orator, speaking to a crowd before an election. Others show the first presi- dent of Israel, Chaim Weiz- mann, relaxing on a deck chair outside his home in Rehovot; a makeshift menorah stuck into the sand in the Negev Desert; faces from a funeral; a religious Jew dressed in a dark suit trudg- ing across a flat Safed landscape. The exhibition also in- cludes the better known, dramatic photographs from Spain, pre and post-war Europe, Mexico and Indo- china, some of which "have been turned into symbols that go beyond the photos," says Bar-Am, referring es- pecially to one of the most extraordinary photograpphs in the collection which hangs just inside the entrance to the museum. Taken in 1936, it shows the split-second death of an anonymous Loyalist soldier during the Civil War in Spain. Frozen by the camera, the man's moment of death has become a "collec- tive, universal symbol," Bar-Am comments. Capa also took portraits of his friends, including artist Pablo Picasso, pictured hold- ing a sunshade over the young Francoise Gilot; author Ernest Hemingway sitting sprawled next to his son; and a profile