Saturday, January 26, 2008

OBIT: Bernie Boston, 74; photographer

Bernie Boston, 74; photographer chronicled a tumultuous era

http://www.latimes.com/news/printedition/california/la-me-boston24jan24,1,5543324.story?ctrack=6&cset=true

By Jocelyn Y. Stewart, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
January 24, 2008

Bernie Boston, the photojournalist who captured the iconic image of a
young Vietnam War protester placing a flower in the barrel of a rifle
held by a National Guardsman, died Tuesday at his home in Basye, Va. He was 74.

Boston, a former photographer for the Washington Star, the Dayton
Daily News and the Los Angeles Times, died from complications of
amyloidosis, a rare disease in which abnormal proteins build up in
organs and tissues, said his wife, Peggy Boston.

The photo known as "Flower Power" became Boston's signature image and
earned him acclaim in the world of photojournalism. Taken during an
antiwar march on the Pentagon on Oct. 22, 1967, the photo was a
finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.

" 'Flower Power' is one of those quintessential images," said Therese
Mulligan of the Rochester Institute of Technology, which houses
Boston's archives and in 2006 presented an exhibition of his works.
"It sums up that period, how a lot of people feel about the '60s."

Boston was a photographer for the now-defunct Washington Star when
antiwar demonstrators approached the Pentagon. Positioned on a wall
at the mall entrance to the Pentagon, Boston watched as a lieutenant
marched a squad of guardsmen into the sea of demonstrators. The squad
formed a semicircle, their guns pointed at the demonstrators. Boston
was ready for anything that might happen.

"And this young man appeared with flowers and proceeded . . . [to]
put them down the rifle barrel," Boston told National Public Radio in
2006. "And I was on the wall so I could see all this, and I just
started shooting."

The resulting photograph is a rich, nuanced image of a chapter of U.S. history.

"In photojournalistic terms, it's referred to as a decisive moment
when everything comes together," Mulligan said of the moment Boston captured.

Back at the office, Boston's photograph received a lukewarm response.
It was not prominently displayed in the newspaper.

"The editor didn't see the importance of the picture," Boston said
later. "We buried it," Boston told NPR. "I entered it in contests,
and it started winning everything and being recognized."

Born May 18, 1933, in Washington, D.C., Boston grew up in McLean,
Va., and was a photographer for his high school newspaper and
yearbook. In 1955, after earning a degree in photography from the
Rochester Institute, he spent three years in the Army. He joined the
staff of the Dayton Daily News in Ohio in 1963 and three years later
joined the staff of the Washington Star, where he remained until the
paper folded in 1981.

The same year he photographed "Flower Power," Boston shot a portrait
of former Black Panther H. Rap Brown. He captured images of the civil
rights movement, including a portrait of the Rev. Martin Luther King
Jr. during his Poor People's Campaign. Boston also photographed every
U.S. president from Truman to Clinton.

In 1981 the Los Angeles Times hired Boston in its Washington, D.C.,
bureau. Six years later, Boston was a finalist for a Pulitzer Prize
in spot news photography for his photograph of King's widow, Coretta
Scott King, at the unveiling of a bronze bust of King.

Boston and his wife moved to Basye in 1994, where he published and
she edited the Bryce Mountain Courier. Boston is survived by his
wife, an aunt and two nieces.

jocelyn.stewart@latimes.com

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