Texarkana Gazette

Retired photograph­er Lou Krasky dies at 86

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COLUMBIA, S.C. — Lou Krasky, an Associated Press photograph­er who took photos of presidents and the pope as well as hurricanes, golf tournament­s, car racing stars and space shuttle launches throughout his more than 35 years with the wire service, has died.

Krasky, 86, died Thursday, his family said. No cause of death was given.

Krasky was born in New York City and joined the U.S. Navy after finishing high school. The military taught him photograph­y and Krasky started working for the AP in Columbia, South Carolina, in 1968.

Like many photograph­ers of his era, Krasky was part chemist to develop photos and create color prints, part engineer to get the lighting and shutter speed right and transmit the photos, and part magician to make it all come together perfectly.

The uncanny ability to make newspaper photos look like art earned him the nicknames “Maestro” and “The Artiste” from his colleagues.

“Lou was, to me, the epitome of an AP shooter. He always seemed to know exactly where to be to get the shot,” said Jim Clarke, AP’S managing director of local markets and a former reporter in the Columbia bureau early in his career. “But more than that, Lou kept us out of trouble. He’d been doing the job as long as some of us had been alive. A brief word from Lou was enough to prompt a new line of questionin­g, a new way of seeing the story.”

Krasky worked with the AP until his retirement in 2004. He was at every major event in his adopted home state from civil rights protests to the trial of mother Susan Smith convicted of killing her sons to the first women accepted at The Citadel military college to a large chunk of U.S. Sen. Strom Thurmond’s political career.

“Krasky was at the forefront of every major and minor happening in the Palmetto State for nearly four decades,” longtime South Carolina AP sports writer Pete Iacobelli said. “He took pictures of sports figures, celebritie­s and politician­s, all with a sharp eye for details that might get past other photograph­ers.”

And, he did all of this with an interestin­g slight Southern drawl that layered over his New York accent and a pleasant and entertaini­ng nature that left the famous and not-so-famous subjects of his photos seeking him out the next time they saw him.

“Lou was always a gracious man teaching me and others the ins and outs of shooting state government,” said Charles Rex Arbogast, an AP photograph­er who started his career at a South Carolina newspaper. “He was a fount of historical experience and knowledge.”

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