The Terror of War

Nick Út

September 15, 2022

On September 15th, the Wilhelm Fabry Museum in Hilden, Germany, offers a curator’s tour of the exhibition ‘Burnt into Memory – The Story of the Photograph Everyone Knows: The Napalm Girl by Nick Út’.
On September 15th from 6.30 p.m., the Wilhelm Fabry Museum invites visitors to a curator’s tour of the showcase ‘Burnt into Memory – The Story of the Photograph Everyone Knows: The Napalm Girl by Nick Út’.

In the course of this guided tour, curator Michael Ebert will share fascinating details and background information about the exhibition, which will be on display until October 30, 2022.

Ebert has spent years researching the history of Nick Út’s haunting photograph. His comprehensive essay on the subject was featured in the book ‘Images in Conflict’ (Jonas Publishing, 2019). When Nick Út was honoured with the Leica Hall of Fame Award in 2012, Ebert curated the accompanying exhibition. His work is based both on the meticulous processing of historical documents, and the personal statements and recollections of the surviving witnesses.

For further information visit Wilhelm Fabry Museum and Michael Ebert
ALL IMAGES ON THIS PAGE: © Nick Út

Nick Út+-

Nick Út und Kim Phúc, Juni 2015, Hamburg © Petra Gerwers, aus der Serie „Tim Travelers“
Nick Út And Kim Phúc, June 2015, Hamburg  © Petra Gerwers,  from her Time Travelers series

...was born Huynh Cong Út, in Long An, Vietnam, on March 29, 1951. Following the death of his older brother, who was working as a war reporter for the Associated Press (AP) in Vietnam, Huynh Cong also became a photojournalist for the AP. After being evacuated from Vietnam, he worked in Japan, South Korea and the USA. He continued working full-time for the AP, until 2017. In 2020, Út was the first photojournalist to receive the National Medal of Arts, the most important award granted by the US government for artists and patrons of the arts. Út lives in Los Angeles. More

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The Terror of War

Nick Út