As seen through a fish-eye lens from an apartment four blocks away, smoke streams from the north tower within minutes of the first plane's attack. Photograph by Patricia McDonough

As seen through a fish-eye lens from an apartment four blocks away, smoke streams from the north tower within minutes of the first plane's attack. Photograph by Patricia McDonough

Patricia McDonough Alex Webb Thomas Hoepker Jerry Spagnoli Rob Howard Patrick Witty
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Patricia McDonough As seen through a fish-eye lens from an apartment four blocks away, smoke streams from the north tower within minutes of the first plane's attack. Photograph by Patricia McDonough Alex Webb On a Brooklyn rooftop, shortly after the collapse of the twin towers, Jenna Piccirillo and three-month-old Vaughan embody innocence and resilience, according to the photographer: "Life continues in the face of disaster...despite the horrors we inflict on one another." Photograph © Alex Webb/Magnu... Thomas Hoepker After taking this picture on 9/11 in Brooklyn, the photographer found it upsettingly tranquil, and decided not to publish the image widely until four years after the attacks. Photograph © Thomas Hoepker/Magnum Photos Jerry Spagnoli An expert in nineteenth-century photographic techniques brought a wooden view camera and a daguerreotype plate to his Chelsea rooftop, making a three-second exposure as the south tower disappeared on the horizon. Photograph by Jerry Spagnoli Rob Howard At Rector Street and Broadway, a photographer leaned out his window with a medium-format camera and caught the moment before the second plane's impact. Photograph by Rob Howard Patrick Witty A knot of bystanders at Park Row and Beekman Street look up as the south tower begins to collapse. Photograph by Patrick Witty