Dan Budnik

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Dan Budnik is an American photographer noted for his portraits of famous people and photographs of the Civil Rights Movement.

Born in 1933 in Long Island, New York, Budnik studied at the Art Students League of New York in the late 1950s. Budnik began his photography career as Philippe Halsman's assistant. He eventually worked for Life, Sports Illustrated, and Vogue magazines. In 1963, Budnik persuaded Life to have him create a long-term photo essay showing the seriousness of the Selma to Montgomery march.

Budnik has photographed Candice Bergen, Sophia Loren, Martin Luther King, Jr., Georgia O'Keefe, Willem de Kooning, and Dwight D. Eisenhower. The American Society of Media Photographers awarded Budnik to its 1998 Honor Roll Award. Budnik's work is in the collections of the King Center in Atlanta, Georgia, and the Museum of Modern Art. Budnik also exhibited his work at the Agnes gallery.

Budnik lives in Tucson, Arizona.

[edit] Book

  • The Book of Elders: The Life Stories of Great American Indians, as told to Sandy Johnson, photographed by Dan Budnik. San Francisco: Harper San Francisco, 1994. ISBN 978-0-06-250837-9

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