The George Eastman Museum is proud to present American, born Hungary: Kertész, Capa, and the Hungarian American photographic legacy, September 26, 2025 through March 1, 2026, an exhibition ending its worldwide tour in the museum’s Main Galleries.

American, born Hungary: Kertész, Capa, and the Hungarian American photographic legacy examines the pioneering artistry that emerged out of backdrops of persecution and perseverance. The exhibition follows a remarkable number of émigrés and exiles from Hungary to Berlin and Paris, and then on to New York, Chicago, and Los Angeles, where they reinvented themselves and American photography. This exhibition is the first full examination of their circuitous journeys to the United States—in the aftermaths of two world wars and Hungary’s student-led revolt in 1956—and the wondrous artistic legacy that developed along the way.

“This exhibition provides an exciting opportunity to understand the true impact that Hungarian émigrés had on the history of photography,” said Jamie M. Allen, Stephen B. and Janice G. Ashley Curator and Head of the Department of Photography. “From artistic efforts through the Bauhaus and New Vision photography to remarkable photojournalistic efforts that have stood the test of time, the photographers in this exhibition underscore the many ways in which individuals can influence our worldview.”

More than 150 stunning and surreal photographs capture the unexpected beauty of fleeting shadows, gritty urban life, glamorous celebrities, and the promises of America. Included are works by notable artists such as André Kertész, Nickolas Muray, Martin Munkácsi, and György Kepes, along with less familiar names whose images are instantly recognizable. One example is Robert Capa, a pioneer of modern photojournalism whose photographs of Omaha Beach on D-Day are among the most famous of World War II.

Providing a missing chapter in art history, the exhibition focuses on the astounding impact of Hungarian-born artists on photography in the United States, especially in urban centers. Among the highlights are works by László Moholy-Nagy, whose avant-garde beginnings in Dessau, Germany, inspired a “New Bauhaus” that sought to establish Chicago as a design incubator. Tailor and photographer John Albok’s images of urban life during the Great Depression were praised by the New York times. On the west coast, André de Dienes’s portraits of cinema’s icons, including Marilyn Monroe, helped fuel Hollywood’s Golden Age.

Visitors have the opportunity to marvel at the poetic street scenes, Hollywood portraits, fashion photographs, and images of war produced by more than thirty Hungarian-born artists who transformed photography in the twentieth century.

American, born Hungary is organized by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts. It was curated by Alex Nyerges, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Director and CEO, with Károly Kincses, founding director of the Hungarian Museum of Photography.