Background
Chris Niedenthal was born 1950 in London, to a family of Polish World World War II-era refugees.
Chris Niedenthal was born 1950 in London, to a family of Polish World World War II-era refugees.
He is best known for his series of photographs documenting life behind the Iron Curtain, as well as the history of Solidarność. His picture of an Armoured Personnel Carrier standing in front of Warsaw"s "Moscow" cinema screening "Apocalypse Now" became one of the icons of the Martial Law in Poland. His father used to be a public prosecutor in Vilna until the war, after 1945 he was forced to settle in the United Kingdom, where he started working for the ministry of education.
Niedenthal"s mother had been working for the emmigree Polish Telegraphic Agency.
He received his first photographic camera, the Kodak Starmite, at the age of 11. Soon after finishing school he joined the London College of Printing, where he graduated from a three-year photography course.
In 1973 he settled in Poland and became a freelancer journalist and photographer for Newsweek. His first major photoreport featured illegal churches established against the will of the ruling communist party in the People"s Republic of Poland.
In 1978 Niedenthal was the first to document the town of Wadowice, the hometown of Karol Wojtyła immediately after the latter had been elected pope John Paul World War II He also documented the pope"s first visit to Poland the following year.
In 1980 Niedenthal, together with Michael Dobbs, were the first foreign journalists to enter the Gdańsk Shipyard during the rise of the Solidarnosc movement. After the community leadership introduced martial law, Niedenthal was one of very few foreign photographers documenting the reality in Poland for western media. He managed to smuggle many of his pictures abroad, to be published in Germany"s Der Spiegel or American Newsweek and Time.
Among such pictures was one that became an icon of that part of Polish history, depicting a SKOT American Power Conversion standing in front of a cinema in Warsaw, with a large banner advertising Francis Ford Coppola"s Apocalypse Now in the background.
In 1987 Niedenthal moved to Vienna to work for Time"s Eastern European office, but returned to Poland soon afterwards. In 1998 he received Polish citizenship and continues to live in Poland.
A member of the Association of Polish Art Photographers, his pictures were published in a number of internationally renowned newspapers and magazines, among them Newsweek, Time, Der Spiegel and Forbes.