The Day

Photograph­er Dan Budnik dies in Arizona at age 87

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Tucson, Ariz. (AP) — Acclaimed photograph­er Dan Budnik, noted for his portraits of artists in New York in the 1960s along with the civil rights movement and Native American culture, has died. He was 87.

Budnik died last Friday of natural causes at an assisted living facility in Tucson, his nephew Kim Newton said Monday.

In 1958, Budnik documented the Youth March for Integrated Schools to the White House and Lincoln Memorial and the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom in 1963.

Budnik also was known for his striking portraits of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. just moments after his “I Have a Dream” speech at the March on Washington. TIME magazine chose one of Budnik’s portraits of King for its “I Have a Dream” 50th anniversar­y issue in 2013.

Budnik also photograph­ed every stage of the Selma to Montgomery March in Alabama in 1965.

Born in Mineola, Long Island, Budnik followed his sister Vera to Los Angeles but returned to New York after graduating high school to study painting.

He was accepted into the prestigiou­s Magnum Photos group in 1957 and photograph­ed atrocities in Cuba the following year. His Cuba photos were published in Life, Sports Illustrate­d and Vogue magazines.

By the late 1960s, Budnik began to devote much of his time to Native American causes. He photograph­ed the elders of 20 Native American nations across the country.

Friendship­s he built within the Hopi nation led him to settle in Arizona in the late 1970s.

Budnik also befriended famed painter Georgia O’Keeffe and often stayed with her at the Ghost Ranch in Abiquiu, N.M.

He shot a series of iconic late images of O’Keeffe, which were published in People magazine in 1975.

Budnik was awarded the American Society of Media Photograph­ers Honor Award in 1999.

Newton said his uncle “could capture moments” and “cared about the underdog” and saw things from a unique point of view.

“He had a very good sense of people and how those people were reacting to the times and he could capture that essence. I think that was one of his greatest skills,” said Newton, who has been a photojourn­alism professor at the University of Arizona in Tucson for 13 years.

Besides Newton, Budnik is survived by his son Aaron Budnik, who is a rare books dealer in London, and grandson Riley Budnik.

Newton said Budnik was scheduled to be buried Wednesday at Camp Navajo in Flagstaff, where he moved about 15 years ago and lived for about six years.

 ?? KIM NEWTON VIA AP ?? This 2013 photo provided by Kim Newton shows photograph­er Dan Budnik on his 80th birthday in Orvieto, Italy.
KIM NEWTON VIA AP This 2013 photo provided by Kim Newton shows photograph­er Dan Budnik on his 80th birthday in Orvieto, Italy.

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