Description
The picture by ROBERT CAPA shows a girl
who is resting on a pile of bags that are placed on the ground. She is sitting
on one bag and is leaning against another resting her head on it. Under
her head there is a dark blanket which serves as a pillow. Both the girl
and the bags on which she is sitting are in the foreground and the centre
of the picture. The girl is wearing a loose dark coat or jacket with a black
collar, black sandals and white socks. Her posture and facial expression
betray tiredness and exhaustion. It looks as if she might fall asleep at
any minute. But she is awake. With a tired and serious expression on her
face she takes notice of everything around her. In the background there
are more pieces of luggage, and in front of the girl there is something
tied into a bundle and an empty bottle. There are no other people in the
photograph.
Formal aspects
The whole image is presented in vertical format.
The photographer used a medium
shot - one that isn't wide enough to show the overall setting but
tight enough to focus on the most interesting elements within the scene.
Thus, the figure of the girl is framed evenly on all sides, which creates
a sense of balance in the picture. As far as the choice of focus is concerned, the main object - the girl sitting on the bags -
is in focus, i.e. is sharp, while the elements in the background are out
of focus. Both choice of frame and focus help to direct the viewer's attention
to the main object.
Interpretation
The main idea expressed in the
picture is that of rest, which is mainly conveyed by the girl's posture.
But the picture doesn't tell us much about the circumstances of the rest.
Thus, we are invited to speculate about that:
There are some elements in the picture that seem to support the idea of the girl being on a journey: the piles of baggage could be an indicator for her waiting in a train station. The amount of baggage also suggest that she might be moving from one place to another taking along all her belongings - like a refugee in times of war.
As a key to understanding the picture one might also turn to the life and work of the photographer: ROBERT CAPA (1913-1954) was one of the most famous representatives of documentary photography in his time, working mainly as a war correspondent. CAPA's photographs demonstrated what it meant for both soldiers and civilians to struggle and survive in times of war. A great number of photos were taken during the Spanish Civil War, the picture discussed above being one example. His Civil War pictures have become impressive testimonies of the feelings and sufferings of the Spanish people and, at the same time, a manifesto against war, opression and injustice. Viewing the picture of the girl in this context, we might come to understand that the situation depicted is exemplary in the sense that it illustrates how war involves everybody - even the innocent, and that it shows what war does to people: it exhausts them, isolates them from their families and forces them away from places they call their homes.