Robert McCabe

Distinguished Photographer

Robert McCabe

Robert McCabe was born in Chicago in 1934 and grew up in Rye, New York. His father worked for a picture newspaper in New York City, and as a result of his father’s gift of a Kodak Baby Brownie in 1939, McCabe started taking photographs when he was five.His earliest quest was for newsworthy photographs and he gathered images of hurricanes, drownings, and auto and train accidents. His interests shifted to people, still life, and landscapes during three years in western Massachusetts where little of dramatic interest occurred.

His first photographs of Europe were the result of a trip in 1954 to France, Italy, and Greece. He returned to Greece in 1955 and 1957 and photographed the Cyclades for National Geographic.

His black and white photos were first exhibited in 1954 and 1955 at Firestone Library at Princeton University, and in a traveling exhibition which ensued. During this period he also appeared on television with Ambassador George Melas giving a photographic tour of Greece. In 1967 a selection of photographs was exhibited at the Olympic Gallery (now Olympic Tower) in New York City under the auspices of Spyros Skouras. The publication of his first book, Metamorphosis, was in 1979. Since then he has published more than 20 books and catalogs.

Mr. McCabe has exhibited his work in London, Paris, Brussels, and The Hague; in many locations in Greece including several in Athens, as well as in Patmos, Santorini, Thessaloniki, Monodendri, Patras, Corfu, Amorgos, Serifos, and Poros. He has also exhibited in the United States in New York City, Boston, and Jackson Hole, WY. 

His published books cover subjects and locations in Greece, France, Italy, New York City, New England, Havana, China, and Antarctica. Several of the Greek books cover specific sites, including Mykonos, Santorini, Patmos, Serifos, Kasos, Mycenae, and Strofades.