During the Second World War, the American Lee Miller was one of the few female photographers accredited as war correspondent for the U.S. Army. For Vogue magazine she travelled to the Front on the European mainland where she made several impressive pictures.
Lee Miller was born in Poughkeepsie, New York in 1907, where from a young age her father introduced her to photography. After a successful modeling career in the later 20’s Miller decided to go behind the camera herself. During the 30’s she worked in Paris, New York, Caïro and London.
At the outbreak of the Second World War, Miller was living in London and working for Vogue. She ignored the plea of her friends and family to return to the United States. When the male photographers of Vogue were send to the front, Miller was offered the position of photographer. One of her first series was photographing women who were active in the army or worked as nurses.
As the war proceeded Miller started to do more fieldwork which lead to her being appointed as one of the few female photographers of the U.S. Army. She arrived in Normandy in July 1944, a month after the allied invasion had begun. Her first task was photographing the American nurses near Omaha Beach. The following months she accompanied the Allied troops who liberated Europe. She was present during the siege of St. Malo, the liberation of Paris and the Alsace region. Miller also produced impressive pictures of the concentration camps Buchenwald and Dachau. Though, her most iconic photo remains the one she took of herself in the bath of Hitler’s apartment in Munich.
After the war, Miller had a difficult time processing what she had seen at the Front. She only spoke little about it. Her son only discovered much of her work in boxes in the attic, after her death in 1977.