TIME Behind the Photos

9/11: The Photographs That Moved Them Most

On September 11, 2001, photography editors across the world, overcome with a deluge of devastating imagery, faced the daunting task of selecting photos that would go on to define a catastrophe like no other. A decade later, TIME asked a wide variety of the industry’s leading photo editors, photographers, authors, educators, and bloggers to tell us which image moved them most—and why.

(Related: The Mohawk Ironworkers Rebuilding The New York Skyline)

Some couldn’t choose one single image. Vin Alabiso, head of photography at the Associated Press on September 11, 2001, said, “Of the thousands of images that were captured, I thought only a handful would truly resonate with me. I was wrong. As a document of a day filled with horror and heroism, the collective work of so many professionals and amateurs leaves its own indelible mark on our memory.”

Holly Hughes, editor of Photo District News, said she was moved most by the photographs of the missing people that blanketed the city in the days after 9/11. “The images that can still move me to tears are the snapshots of happy, smiling people looking out from the homemade missing posters that were taped to signposts and doorways and mailboxes,” she said. “How those posters were made, the state of mind of the people who stood at Xerox machines to make copies, it’s too painful to contemplate. Those flyers stayed up around the city for weeks, through wind and rain, and became entwined with the sorrow and anxiety we carried with us day after day.”

(Related: Revisiting 9/11: Unpublished Photos by James Nachtwey)

Alabiso added, “A decade later, I could only wish that the most memorable photo of September 11, 2001, would not have been memorable at all…simply two towers silhouetted against a clear azure-blue sky.”

To visit TIME’s Beyond 9/11: A Portrait of Resilience, a project that chronicles 9/11 and its aftermath, click here.

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Olivier Picard, photo editor and photographer; formerDirector of Photography for U.S. News and World ReportÒSince we were based in Washington, D.C., we had no communication with New York for the first couple of hours. The deadline for closing our special issue was the next day. I didnÕt sleep. We published an image by freelance photographer Patrick Witty that for me best evokes that tumultuous morning. It is 9:59 a.m. and New Yorkers witness the collapse of the South Tower. Their reaction was mine. Immediate. Disbelief. Raw. Violent.Ó 119951789JT0001_911 World Trade Center Attack - Aftermath - WTC 11. September 2001 - 10 Jahre danach: Die Kamera als Filter des Grauens September 11, 2001 by The New York Times David Friend, editor at Vanity Fair and author of the book, Watching the World Change: The Stories Behind the Images of 9/11ÒWolfgang was doing an art project in which he was taking, with a fixed camera in Brooklyn, a panorama of the New York skyline. And every four seconds it would tick off and over the internet he would send, to a gallery in New York, a 22 x 9 foot mural projecting the image of downtown Manhattan. And it would refresh every four seconds. As Wolfgang said, ÔHistory high jacked art. Reality high jacked artÕ. And suddenly he recorded this transformation of New YorkÑmass destruction and death. ItÕs a sense of no art or expression exists without its toehold in reality. September 11th Terrorist Attacks World Trade Center Attacked September 11th Terrorist Attacks Ground Zero Two Days After World Trade Terror Attack 2001�91664n00kcu.JPG

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