Google Doodle released a doodle on Friday to mark 80th birthday of French Iranian photographer and journalist Abbas Attar.
The doodle depicts the photographer with his camera in the foreground while the term ‘Google’ can be read in the background that seems to be a depiction of photos.
The doodle spans the region of Ireland, United Kingdom, France, Switzerland, Germany, Austria, and Pakistan over its visibility.
Abbas was born in southeast Iran in 1944. He gained recognition for his photojournalism and essays that chronicled conflicts, religions, and the plights of communities around the globe.
The French-Iranian photographer and journalist dedicated himself to documenting societies in conflict. His iconic black-and-white style photos captured the “suspended moment”.
In a statement, Google said “little is known about Abbas’s early life, but he fell in love with photography before moving to Paris. He started to focus his work on covering social developments in developing nations.
In a career that spanned six decades, he covered wars and revolutions in Biafra, Bangladesh, Northern Ireland, Vietnam, Bosnia, the Middle East, including the Yom Kippur War of 1973, Chile, Cuba, and South Africa during apartheid, and pursued a lifelong interest in religion and its intersection with society.
In 1978-1979, Abbas covered the Iranian Revolution. This visionary work recording the rise of religious fundamentalism was published in a seminal book Iran: the Confiscated Revolution.
After the revolution, Abbas journeyed through Mexico, while attempting to define his own aesthetics. He photographed the country books Return to Oapan and Return to Mexico, Journeys Beyond the Mask.
In the following years, Abbas documented the major religions of the world starting with the resurgence of radical Islam from as early as 1987. This work took on particular significance after 9/11, which spurred him to record its aftermath in a 7-year journey through 16 countries in the Islamic world.
He proceeded to photograph Christianity, Animism, Buddhism, Hinduism, and ending with Judaism at the time of his death. His prescient work explored how religious fanaticism was replacing political ideologies as a major source of conflict around the world.
He pursued a lifelong interest in religion and its intersection with society and gained worldwide acclamation for his coverage of the Iranian Revolution in 1978-1979.
He recorded the rise of religious fundamentalism in his visionary work that was published in a seminal book ‘Iran: the Confiscated Revolution.’ He is also credited with documenting the major religions of the world including the resurgence of radical Islam from as early as 1987.
With his work published worldwide, Abbas was a veteran member of a renowned photo agency and one of the greatest photographers of all time. His humanistic images live on to inspire future generations to strive for lucidity and honesty so as to gain a better understanding of our world.