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Danube Revisited: Nine Photographers Retrace Inge Morath's Legendary Journey

5 minute read

Inge Morath made her first trip along the Danube River in 1958, but was unable to complete the journey then. Not until the fall of the Berlin Wall, in 1989, would she successfully cross the borders that, during the 1950s, politics had made impassable to most photojournalists. Thus, the first trip, as she later wrote, “turned into many trips. Shorter or longer ones depending on bureaucratic whims and my pecuniary situation.”

To follow the meanderings of the river, and to photograph its storied tributaries, became a passion for Morath; the grand voyage of a lifetime, on which she always discovered something new wherever and whenever she visited. This gallery includes just a few of the many photographs Morath made through the decades, until her last trip in 2001.


This summer, nine photographers will take turns driving a mobile art gallery from July 7 to August 11 — housed in an 18-wheeler — along the Danube River, from the Black Forest to the Black Sea, amassing a collection of visual stories in the spirit of the celebrated Danube series created by Inge Morath across five decades. Between 1958 and 2001, the Austrian-born Morath (1923-2002) chronicled the people and the ever-changing landscape along the great river; Danube Revisited is both a tribute to and a broadening of her monumental project.

The seeds for Danube Revisited were planted in 2012 when a conversation between Inge Morath Award winners Lurdes R. Basolí, Olivia Arthur and Emily Schiffer turned to a problem many photographers face: the fact that the subjects of documentary projects rarely get to see their likenesses in the works’ final exhibitions.

“We were in Austria showing our work at the gallery that represents Inge, and the gallery’s founders, who knew her well, gave us a real sense of how special she was,” explains Schiffer. “They had planned the logistics for her project along the Danube, and told us stories about Inge’s genuine human connection with her subjects, which enabled her to turn cultural or bureaucratic barriers into adventures. We wanted to take Inge’s images back to the Danube, and to honor her legacy by creating new work inspired by hers.” The award winners imagined a traveling gallery that would both return Morath’s images to their origins and promote the under-represented female voice and eye in a field long dominated by men.

The three were given Morath’s unpublished diaries from her journey along the Danube.

“Reading her diaries was like being given a window into Inge’s soul,” says Basolí. “She writes so beautifully. After reading them and ‘meeting’ her there was no way we could avoid making our idea real.”

They invited the other Morath award winners to be part of the project, and almost all of them are on board.

The mobile gallery will feature Morath’s photographs of the region, returning her pictures to their sources and engaging communities with their own histories. Along the way, the nine photographers (with three of their young children in tow) will produce new work influenced by the same landscapes and people that inspired Morath.

“We want to celebrate the women who dedicate their lives to documentary photography,” explains Claire Martin, who has spent the past two years developing the project with Arthur, Basolí and Schiffer, “and it’s important to us that the mothers in our group don’t have to choose between their work and their children.”

The award winners will also seek out substantive documentary work about life along the Danube created by women who know the region best. “We don’t want to presume ourselves as authorities in unfamiliar cultures. We want to promote and celebrate the work by female photographers in the Danube region who can best portray their culture and communities,” says Arthur. Four female professional photographers from the region will be on the trip, and local cultural institutions will host the truck-gallery, artist talks and portfolio reviews of aspiring local female photographers.

Danube Revisited will culminate in a large-scale exhibition produced by Fundación Telefónica, pairing Morath’s Danube work with the new images, a book published by Fotohof and a documentary feature film about the tour.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin fi
Putin hooked at least one fish from this perch, Aug. 3, 2009.Inge Morath

The Inge Morath Award is an annual grant judged and funded by the members of Magnum Photos to honor the legacy of Inge Morath, the first female member of the agency. The Inge Morath Truck Project is a collaboration between the nine award-winning photographers, The Inge Morath Foundation, and Fotohof Gallery, which facilitated Inge Morath’s journey along the Danube. Support is also being provided by the Magnum Foundation, Spedition Ebeling Truck Company and Fundación Telefonica.


Jennifer Gandin Le is a writer, photographer, and small business owner living in Austin, TX.

Read more about the Kickstarter campaign to support the project here


Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
The following images were taken by Inge Morath between 1958 and 2001, and are accompanied by excerpts from personal diaries she kept to chronicle her many visits to the Danube.Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"As if to swallow all this glory, the river remains dark for a while, enclosed in rocks, occasionally carrying rafts made out of huge trunks of pine trees, smelling of the resin that drips out of their axemarks."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"The road runs so close to the river now that one feels one could touch the water by just bending a little."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"There it stayed half forgotten, until one day it came to light again as the urgent desire to travel on and along the river Danube from its source to its very end."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"I sleep in old inns with large rooms, featherbeds as covers, chests of drawers with the dry small of old wood, half blind mirrors over watercrock and basin and in the morning, when I wake up, the early light, reflected by the waters of the Danube, dances over the ceiling."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"The vast expanse of the WIENWALD takes over. Everything has been sung about, written about and danced to."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"I finally found the Danube at the foot of the city. It looked like the wet back of a disagreeable grey cat blending in nastily with a lot of other grey backs of cats, all trying to rub themselves against my knees."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"Later in a cellar bar, young artists complained that they were not allowed to be modern, could not express themselves with any freedom."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"Why didn't I want to go like everybody else to see the bona fide tourist attractions like the 'old' castle of the kings in Sinaia or a couple of bathing resorts at the Black Sea? Why not at least visit a relative? Whoever heard of anybody being interested in a river?"Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"The people here have blue eyes, almost transparent, and the wind has cut their faces deeply and tanned their skin."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
After all the river is not just the water. If it is a real river worth the name and the consideration and respect a big river gets, it has spread around it more than an atmosphere, more than a reputation for fish and transportation facilites and even the beauties of its scenery."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum
Inge Morath, Danube Revisited
"Like anybody who is learning to walk, the young Danube doesn't do it well, but in a hurry. It bubbles and gets stuck in tall grass, standing transparently blue and still as an hourglass over green weeds, swallowing other little waters right and left, growing, disappearing under the ground, coming up again and standing a dark eye, a mirror for some rocks it is now big enough to reflect."Inge Morath—The Inge Morath Foundation/Magnum

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