The Photo That Changed the Face of AIDS

In November 1990 LIFE magazine published a photograph of a young man named David Kirby his body wasted by AIDS, his gaze locked on something beyond this world surrounded by anguished family members as he took his last breaths. The haunting image of Kirby on his death bed, taken by a journalism student named Therese Frare, quickly became the one photograph most powerfully identified with the HIV/AIDS epidemic that, by then, had seen millions of people infected (many of them unknowingly) around the globe.

Here, LIFE.com shares the deeply moving story behind that picture, along with Frare’s own memories of those harrowing, transformative years.

“I started grad school at Ohio University in Athens in January 1990,” Frare told LIFE.com. “Right away, I began volunteering at the Pater Noster House, an AIDS hospice in Columbus. In March I started taking photos there and got to know the staff and one volunteer, in particular, named Peta who were caring for David and the other patients.”

David Kirby was born and raised in a small town in Ohio. A gay activist in the 1980s, he learned in the late Eighties while he was living in California and estranged from his family that he had contracted HIV. He got in touch with his parents and asked if he could come home; he wanted, he said, to die with his family around him. The Kirbys welcomed their son back.

Peta, for his part, was an extraordinary (and sometimes extraordinarily difficult) character. Born Patrick Church, Peta was “half-Native American and half-White,” Frare says, “a caregiver and a client at Pater Noster, a person who rode the line between genders and one of the most amazing people I’ve ever met.”

“On the day David died, I was visiting Peta,” Frare told LIFE. “Some of the staff came in to get Peta so he could be with David, and he took me with him. I stayed outside David’s room, minding my own business, when David’s mom came out and told me that the family wanted me to photograph people saying their final goodbyes. I went in and stood quietly in the corner, barely moving, watching and photographing the scene. Afterwards I knew, I absolutely knew, that something truly incredible had unfolded in that room, right in front of me.”

“Early on,” Frare says of her time at Pater Noster House, “I asked David if he minded me taking pictures, and he said, ‘That’s fine, as long as it’s not for personal profit.’ To this day I don’t take any money for the picture. But David was an activist, and he wanted to get the word out there about how devastating AIDS was to families and communities. Honestly, I think he was a lot more in tune with how important these photos might become.”

Frare pauses, and laughs. “At the time, I was like, Besides, who’s going to see these pictures, anyway?

By some estimates, as many as one billion people have seen the now-iconic Frare photograph that appeared in LIFE, as it was reproduced in hundreds of newspaper, magazine and TV stories all over the world focusing on the photo itself and (increasingly) on the controversies that surrounded it.

Frare’s photograph of David’s family comforting him in the hour of his death earned accolades, including a World Press Photo Award, when published in LIFE, but it became positively notorious two years later when Benetton used a colorized version of the photo in a provocative ad campaign. Individuals and groups ranging from Roman Catholics (who felt the picture mocked classical imagery of Mary cradling Christ after his crucifixion) to AIDS activists (furious at what they saw as corporate exploitation of death in order to sell T-shirts) voiced outrage. England’s high-profile AIDS charity, the Terrence Higgins Trust, called for a ban of the ad, labeling it offensive and unethical, while powerhouse fashion magazines like Elle, Vogue and Marie Claire refused to run it. Calling for a boycott of Benetton, London’s Sunday Times argued that “the only way to stop this madness is to vote with our cash.”

“We never had any reservations about allowing Benetton to use Therese’s photograph in that ad,” David Kirby’s mother, Kay, told LIFE.com. “What I objected to was everybody who put their two cents in about how outrageous they thought it was, when nobody knew anything about us, or about David. My son more or less starved to death at the end,” she said, bluntly, describing one of the grisly side effects of the disease. “We just felt it was time that people saw the truth about AIDS, and if Benetton could help in that effort, fine. That ad was the last chance for people to see David a marker, to show that he was once here, among us.”

David Kirby passed away in April 1990, at the age of 32, not long after Frare began shooting at the hospice. But in an odd and ultimately revelatory twist, it turned out that she spent much more time with Peta, who himself was HIV-positive while caring for David, than she did with David himself. She gained renown for her devastating, compassionate picture of one young man dying of AIDS, but the photographs she made after David Kirby’s death revealed an even more complex and compelling tale.

Frare photographed Peta over the course of two years, until he, too, died of AIDS in the fall of 1992.

“Peta was an incredible person,” Frare says. All these years later, the affection in her voice was palpable. “He was dealing with all sorts of dualities in his life he was half-Native American and half-White, a caregiver and a client at Pater Noster, a person who rode the line between genders, all of that but he was also very, very strong.”

As Peta’s health deteriorated in early 1992 as his HIV-positive status transitioned to AIDS the Kirbys began to care for him, in much the same way that Peta had cared for their son in the final months of his life. Peta had comforted David; spoken to him; held him; tried to relieve his pain and loneliness through simple human contact and the Kirbys resolved to do the same for Peta, to be there for him as his strength and his vitality faded.

Kay Kirby told LIFE.com that she “made up my mind when David was dying and Peta was helping to care for him, that when Peta’s time came and we all knew it would come that we would care for him. There was never any question. We were going to take care of Peta. That was that.

“For a while there,” Kay remembers, “I took care of Peta as often as I could. It was hard, because we couldn’t afford to be there all the time. But Bill would come in on weekends and we did the best we could in the short time we had.”

Kay describes Peta, as his condition worsened in late 1991 and 1992, as a “very difficult patient. He was very clear and vocal about what he wanted, and when he wanted it. But during all the time we cared for him, I can only recall once when he yelled at me. I yelled right back at him he knew I was not going to let him get away with that sort of behavior and we went on from there.”

Bill and Kay Kirby were, in effect, the house parents for the home where Peta spent his last months.

“My husband and I were hurt by the way David was treated in the small country hospital near our home where he spent time after coming back to Ohio,” Kay Kirby said. “Even the person who handed out menus refused to let David hold one [for fear of infection]. She would read out the meals to him from the doorway. We told ourselves that we would help other people with AIDS avoid all that, and we tried to make sure that Peta never went through it.”

“I had worked for newspapers for about 12 years already when I went to grad school,” Therese Frare says, “and was very interested in covering AIDS by the time I got to Columbus. Of course, it was difficult to find a community of people with HIV and AIDS willing to be photographed back then, but when I was given the okay to take pictures at Pater Noster I knew I was doing something that was important important to me, at least. I never believed that it would lead to being published in LIFE, or winning awards, or being involved in anything controversial—certainly nothing as epic as the Benetton controversy. In the end, the picture of David became the one image that was seen around the world, but there was so much more that I had tried to document with Peta, and the Kirbys and the other people at Pater Noster. And all of that sort of got lost, and forgotten.”

Lost and forgotten or, at the very least, utterly overshadowed until LIFE.com contacted Frare, and asked her where the photo of David Kirby came from.

“You know, at the time the Benetton ad was running, and the controversy over their use of my picture of David was really raging, I was falling apart,” Frare says. “I was falling to pieces. But Bill Kirby told me something I never forgot. He said, ‘Listen, Therese. Benetton didn’t use us, or exploit us. We used them. Because of them, your photo was seen all over the world, and that’s exactly what David wanted.’ And I just held on to that.”

After the Benetton controversy finally subsided, Therese Frare went on to other work, other photography, freelancing from Seattle for the New York Times, major magazines and other outlets. While the world has become more familiar with HIV and AIDS in the intervening years, Frare’s photograph went a long way toward dispelling some of the fear and, at times, willful ignorance that had accompanied any mention of the disease. Barb Cordle, volunteer director at Pater Noster when David Kirby was there, once said that Frare’s famous photo “has done more to soften people’s hearts on AIDS than any other I have ever seen. You can’t look at that picture and hate a person with AIDS. You just can’t.”

[See more of Therese Frare’s work at FrareDavis.com]

David Kirby on his deathbed, Ohio, 1990.

David Kirby on his deathbed, Ohio, 1990.

Therese Frare

In another of Therese Frare's photos taken in the final moments of David Kirby's life, his caregiver and friend, Peta; David's father; and David's sister, Susan, say goodbye.

In another of Therese Frare’s photos taken in the final moments of David Kirby’s life, goodbyes were said by his caregiver and friend, Peta; David’s father; and David’s sister, Susan.

Therese Frare

Bill Kirby tries to comfort his dying son, David, 1990.

Bill Kirby tried to comfort his dying son, David, 1990.

Therese Frare

A nurse at Pater Noster House in Ohio holds David Kirby's hands not long before he died, spring 1990.

A nurse at Pater Noster House in Ohio held David Kirby’s hands not long before he died, spring 1990.

Therese Frare

David Kirby, Ohio, 1990.

David Kirby, Ohio, 1990.

Therese Frare

David Kirby's mother, Kay, holds a photograph of her son -- taken by Ohio photographer Art Smith -- before AIDS took its toll.

David Kirby’s mother, Kay, held a photograph of her son—taken by Ohio photographer Art Smith—before AIDS took its toll.

Therese Frare

Peta, a volunteer at Pater Noster House in Ohio, cares for a dying David Kirby, 1990.

Peta, a volunteer at Pater Noster House in Ohio, cared for a dying David Kirby, 1990.

Therese Frare

Peta lies on a couch in a home rented by Pater Noster House, 1991. After the infamous ad ran, Benetton donated money to Pater Noster, some of which was used to furnish the house where Peta and other patients stayed.

Peta lay on a couch in a home rented by Pater Noster House, 1991. After the infamous ad ran, Benetton donated money to Pater Noster, some of which was used to furnish the house where Peta and other patients stayed.

Therese Frare

Peta on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, July 1991. "Peta could be a handful at times," Therese Frare told LIFE.com, "but there was a great deal of joy in our relationship. He wasn't like anyone I'd ever met."

Peta on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, July 1991. “Peta could be a handful at times,” Therese Frare told LIFE.com, “but there was a great deal of joy in our relationship. He wasn’t like anyone I’d ever met.”

Therese Frare

Peta swims in a lake on the Pine Ridge (Lakota) Indian Reservation in South Dakota, during a trip home with photographer Therese Frare in July 1991.

Peta swam in a lake on the Pine Ridge (Lakota) Indian Reservation in South Dakota, during a trip home with photographer Therese Frare in July 1991.

Therese Frare

Peta at the Pine Ridge (Lakota) Indian Reservation in South Dakota, during a trip home with Therese Frare in July 1991.

Peta at the Pine Ridge (Lakota) Indian Reservation in South Dakota, during a trip home with Therese Frare in July 1991.

Therese Frare

Peta in Ohio, 1991.

Peta in Ohio, 1991.

Therese Frare

Peta in bed at Pater Noster House, 1992.

Peta in bed at Pater Noster House, 1992.

Therese Frare

Scene at Pater Noster House, Ohio, 1991.

Scene at Pater Noster House, Ohio, 1991.

Therese Frare

Peta at Pater Noster House, 1992.

Peta at Pater Noster House, 1992.

Therese Frare

Peta with Bill and Kay Kirby at Pater Noster House, 1992. "I made up my mind," Kay Kirby said, "when David was dying and Peta was helping to care for him, that when Peta's time came -- and we all knew it would come -- that we would care for him. There was never any question. We were going to take care of Peta. That was that."

Peta with Bill and Kay Kirby at Pater Noster House, 1992. “I made up my mind,” Kay Kirby said, “when David was dying and Peta was helping to care for him, that when Peta’s time came—and we all knew it would come—that we would care for him. There was never any question. We were going to take care of Peta. That was that.”

Therese Frare

Kay Kirby administers medicine to Peta via an IV, 1992.

Kay Kirby administered medicine to Peta via an IV, 1992.

Therese Frare

Peta and Bill Kirby share a quiet moment together in Peta's room, Ohio, 1992.

Peta and Bill Kirby shared a quiet moment together in Peta’s room, Ohio, 1992.

Therese Frare

Peta in hospice, Columbus, Ohio, 1992.

Peta in hospice, Columbus, Ohio, 1992.

Therese Frare

Bill and Kay Kirby, 1992.

Bill and Kay Kirby, 1992.

Therese Frare

Role Reversal: LIFE Goes to a Men’s-Style Party Night for Republican Women

“On the evening of May 20,” begins an article in the June 16, 1941, issue of LIFE magazine, “members of the Young Women’s Republican Club of Milford, Conn., explored the pleasures of tobacco, poker, the strip tease and such other masculine enjoyments as had frequently cost them the evening companionship of husbands, sons and brothers.”

Thus the storied weekly and photographer Nina Leen chronicled the shenanigans that erupted when a group of GOP women got together for an old-fashioned “smoker” (noun: an informal social gathering for men only) on one long, memorable night in southern New England.

Republican women in Connecticut enjoy a good old-fashioned bacchanal in 1941.

Republican women in Connecticut enjoyed a good old-fashioned bacchanal in 1941.

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE made a point of noting that during poker Joan Thornwaite (left) "chewed her cigar fitfully" and "failed to get sick."

LIFE’s original story made a point of noting that during poker Joan Thornwaite (left) “chewed her cigar fitfully” and “failed to get sick.”

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The evening had the potential to get genuinely wild, with LIFE reporting that "spiked punch is dished out to the [night's performers] and local reporters." Alas, "no one got tight."

The evening had the potential to get genuinely wild, with LIFE reporting that “spiked punch is dished out to the [night’s performers] and local reporters.” Alas, “no one got tight.”

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Young Women's Republican Club of Milford, Conn., 1941.

Young Women’s Republican Club of Milford, Conn., 1941.

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Performers scheduled for later in the evening savor their corncob pipes in a dressing room. LIFE noted the corncobs would likely be a one-time enjoyment: "It wouldn't do in Milford."

Performers scheduled for later in the evening savored their corncob pipes in a dressing room. LIFE noted the corncobs would likely be a one-time enjoyment: “It wouldn’t do in Milford.”

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Perhaps the most provocative part of the evening involved that perennial staple (in myth, if not in fact) of male get-togethers: the strip tease. It began with "peeling inconsequential garments" after which the ladies reemerged "in kimonos."

Perhaps the most provocative part of the evening involved that perennial staple (in myth, if not in fact) of male get-togethers: the strip tease. It began with “peeling inconsequential garments” after which the ladies reemerged “in kimonos.”

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE described the "Hefty Ballet" as "a choreographic burlesque devised by a local instructor." No explanation was given as to why the women imagined that men at a smoker customarily enjoy a bit of ballet with their booze, cigars and strippers.

LIFE described the “Hefty Ballet” as “a choreographic burlesque devised by a local instructor.” No explanation was given as to why the women imagined that men at a smoker customarily enjoyed a bit of ballet with their booze, cigars and strippers.

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE deemed the tap dance executed by Miss Connie Mohr the "best act technically in show."

LIFE deemed the tap dance executed by Miss Connie Mohr the “best act technically in show.”

Nina Leen/ Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Between numbers, tap dancer Mohr gets a light from "elocutionist" Kathryn Keller. LIFE characterized the encounter thus: "Butt meets butt on backstage stairs."

Between numbers, tap dancer Mohr got a light from “elocutionist” Kathryn Keller. LIFE characterized the encounter thus: “Butt meets butt on backstage stairs.”

Nina Leen/ Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Before the women could stage a comic wrestling match, they had to get into costume -- an affair that included women stuffing themselves "full of muscles." LIFE urged readers not to overlook the "phony bush of pectoral hair."

Before the women could stage a comic wrestling match, they had to get into costume— an affair that included women stuffing themselves “full of muscles.”

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Properly attired for their wrestling match, it is time to begin. This photograph captures the moment that the "[g]rapplers come to grips."

Properly attired for their wrestling match, it was time to begin. This photograph captured the moment that the “[g]rapplers come to grips.”

Nina Leen/ Life Pictures/Shutterstock

LIFE on the battle: "Huffing and puffing, they punish the mat." Joan Thornwaite (back to camera) "won by tickling in five minutes." Note: Her opponent's mustache is attached to her face with chewing gum.

LIFE on the battle: “Huffing and puffing, they punish the mat.” Joan Thornwaite (back to camera) “won by tickling in five minutes.” Note: Her opponent’s mustache was attached to her face with chewing gum.

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

One man was allowed to attend the smoker; you can see him here on the floor, with both women standing on him as they "beat their chests in triumph."

One man was allowed to attend the smoker; women stood on him as they “beat their chests in triumph.”

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

As the game went into the night, the ash trays overflowed and the air got positively "blue." Reasoning that "if men can take it, so can we," the women continued.

As the game went into the night, the ash trays overflowed and the air got positively “blue.” Reasoning that “if men can take it, so can we,” the women continued.

Nina Leen/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Dawn found the hall filled only with litter: "Porters agreed they hadn't seen so many butts since [the] State Firemen's Convention in 1938." And where were the men? LIFE reports they were "flabbergasted" by the smoker and many "spent the evening playing bingo with abstainers and Democrats at another hall nearby."

Dawn found the hall filled only with litter: “Porters agreed they hadn’t seen so many butts since [the] State Firemen’s Convention in 1938.” And where were the men? LIFE reported they were “flabbergasted” by the smoker and many “spent the evening playing bingo with abstainers and Democrats at another hall nearby.”

Nina Leen/ Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: LIFE in Watts, 1966

The August 1965 Watts Riots (or Watts Rebellion, depending on one’s perspective and politics), were among the bloodiest, costliest and most analyzed uprisings of the notoriously unsettled mid-1960s. Ostensibly sparked by an aggressive traffic stop of a black motorist by white cops, the six-day upheaval resulted in 34 deaths, more than 3,400 arrests and tens of millions of dollars in property damage (back when a million bucks still meant something).

A year after the flames were put out and the smoke cleared from the southern California sky, LIFE revisited the scene of the devastation for a “special section” in its July 15, 1966, issue that the magazine called “Watts: Still Seething.” A good part of that special section featured a series of color photos made by Bill Ray on the streets of Watts: pictures of stylish, even dapper, young men making and hurling Molotov cocktails; of children at play in torched streets and rubble-strewn lots; of wary police and warier residents; of a community struggling to save itself from drugs, gangs, guns, idleness and an enduring, corrosive despair.

In that July 1966 issue, LIFE introduced Ray’s photographs, and Watts itself, in a tone that left no doubt that, whatever else might have happened in the months since the streets were on fire, the future of the district was hardly certain, and the rage that fueled the conflagration had hardly abated:

Before last August the rest of Los Angeles had never heard of Watts. Today, a rock thrown through a Los Angeles store window brings the fearful question: “Is this the start of the next one?” It brings the three armed camps in Los Angeles the police, white civilians, the Negroes face to face for a tense flickering moment. . . .
Whites still rush to gun stores each time a new incident hits the papers. A Beverly Hills sporting goods shop has been sold out of 9mm automatics for months, and the waiting list for pistols runs several pages.
Last week a Negro showed a reporter a .45 caliber submachine gun. “There were 99 more in this shipment,” he said, “and they’re spread around to 99 guys with cars.”
“We know it don’t do no good to burn Watts again,” a young Negro says. “Maybe next time we go up to Beverly Hills.”
Watts seethes with resentments. There is anger toward the paternalism of many job programs and the neglect of Watts needs. There is no public hospital within eight miles and last month Los Angeles voters rejected a proposed $12.3 million bond issue to construct one. When a 6-month-old baby died not long ago because of inadequate medical facilities, the mother’s grief was echoed by a crowd’s outrage. “If it was your baby,” said a Negro confronting a white, “you’d have an ambulance in five minutes.”
Unemployment and public assistance figures invite disbelief in prosperous California. In Watts 24% of the residents were on some form of relief a year ago and that percentage still stands. In Los Angeles the figure is 5%.
[It] takes longer to build a society than to burn one, and fear will be a companion along the way to improvements. “I had started to say it is a beautiful day,” Police Inspector John Powers said, looking out a window, “but beautiful days bring people out and that makes me wish we had rain and winter year-round.”

For his part, Bill Ray, a staff photographer for LIFE from the mid-1960s until the magazine’s demise in the early 1970s, recalled the Watts assignment clearly, and fondly:

“In the mid-nineteen-sixties [Ray told LIFE.com], I shot two major assignments for LIFE in southern California, one after the other, that involved working with young men who were volatile and dangerous. One group was the Hells Angels of San Bernardino the early, hard-core San Berdoo chapter of the gang and the other were the young men who had taken part in the Watts riots the year before.
I did not try to dress like them, act like them or pretend to be tough. I showed great interest in them, and treated them with respect. The main thing was to convince them that I had no connection with the police. The thing that surprised me the most was that, in both cases, as I spent more time with them and got to know them better, I got to like and respect many of them quite a lot. There was a humanity there that we all have inside us. Meeting and photographing different kinds of people has always been the most exciting part of my job. I still love it.
Two big differences in the assignments, though, was that I shot the Hells Angels in black and white which was perfect for their gritty world and “Watts: A Year Later” was in color. Also perfect, because Watts had a lot of color, on the walls, the graffiti, the way people dressed and, of course, my group of bombers who liked to practice making and throwing Molotov cocktails [see slides 17, 18 and 19 in gallery].
Those two assignments documented two utterly marginalized worlds that few people ever get to see up close. There was no job on earth as good as being a LIFE photographer.”

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

The words painted on the grocery store alerted rioters that the stored was African-American owned.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Young men hung out near Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Young men near Simon Rodia’s Watts Towers, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

William Solomon (right, in his home in Watts) commanded a big Watts street gang, which he openly admitted took an active part in the riot. A champion hurdler in high school, he had no job and was on probation for assault. With two followers shown with him, he later helped at a neighborhood association and used his influence to keep order there and, by his interest, give its program a certain prestige in the streets.”

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/ Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Booker Griffin (yellow shirt) moved in on an argument between students and police who found the youths carrying heavy boards and suspected a gang fight. He calmed both sides.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Making Molotov cocktails, Watts, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Molotov cocktails in Watts, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Molotov cocktails in Watts, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Molotov cocktails in Watts, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

LaRoi Drew Ali refused to join any group, but viewed Christianity as a device to keep African-Americans down. “Even if somebody did rise up on Easter,” he said, “it would just be another white man to kick us.”

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Fire Last Time: Life in Watts, 1966

Watts, Los Angeles, 1966.

Bill Ray/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Portraits of Famous Painters and Sculptors

It can be eye-opening to see the men and women behind famous works of art. And yet, while Picasso, Dali, Matisse and perhaps a handful of other “art superstars” are recognized around the world, countless other painters and sculptors, including some of the finest, most influential artists of the past century are, in a sense, invisible. Their works endure; but their look—their faces and the way they held themselves—is often little known 

Here, LIFE.com presents a series of portraits of artists who re-imagined and redefined the way we see the world. Pollock is here, and Picasso, along with Georgia O’Keeffe and even Renoir. But can art aficionados identify a photograph of, Claes Oldenburg? Jasper Johns? Barbara Hepworth? Giorgio de Chirico?

What’s wonderful about the pictures here, including those (like the deeply shadowed silhouettes of Hopper and O’Keeffe) in which we perceive a powerful sense of the full figure, rather than discrete details, is that each photo reveals something uniquely essential about the artist. One would be hard-pressed to find two more dissimilar portraits than those of Arshile Gorky and Robert Rauschenberg; but each captures an aspect of the artist’s personality and sensibility (Gorky’s moody intensity; Rauschenberg’s exuberance) that helps us see something, even if only a glimpse, of the human being behind the art.


Jasper Johns 1958

Jasper Johns, 1958.

Peter Stackpole/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Thomas Hart Benton, 1939

Thomas Hart Benton, 1939.

Alfred Eisenstaedt/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Louise Bourgeois 1983

Louise Bourgeois. 1983.

Ted Thai/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Georgia O'Keeffe photographed on the roof of her Ghost Ranch home in New Mexico, 1967.

Georgia O’Keeffe photographed on the roof of her Ghost Ranch home in New Mexico, 1967.

John Loengard The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Marcel Duchamp 1952

Marcel Duchamp, 1952.

Gordon Parks/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Georges Braque 1946

Georges Braque, 1946.

David E. Scherman/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Pablo Picasso 1949

Pablo Picasso, 1949.

Gjon Mili/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Elaine de Kooning 1964

Elaine de Kooning, 1964.

Alfred Eisenstaedt/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Alexander Calder 1952

Alexander Calder, 1952.

Gordon Parks/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Jackson Pollock 1949

Jackson Pollock, 1949.

Martha Holmes/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Marc Chagall 1960

Marc Chagall, 1960.

Loomis Dean/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Henri Matisse sculpts a nude in clay, Nice, France, 1951.

Henri Matisse sculpts a nude in clay, Nice, France, 1951.

Dmitri Kessel The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Roy Lichtenstein 1963

Roy Lichtenstein, 1963.

John Loengard/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Herman Cherry 1946

Herman Cherry, 1946.

Eliot Elisofon/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Christo 1968

Christo, 1968.

Carlo Bavagnoli/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Salvador Dali 1950

Salvador Dali, 1950.

Mark Kauffman/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Giorgio de Chirico 1949

Giorgio de Chirico, 1949.

Gjon Mili/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Willem de Kooning 1945

Willem de Kooning, 1945.

Gordon Coster/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Guy du Bois 1949

Guy du Bois, 1949

Herbert Gehr/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Marisol Escobar 1957

Marisol Escobar, 1957.

Walter Sanders/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Lyonel Feininger 1951

Lyonel Feininger, 1951.

Andreas Feininger/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Alberto Giacometti 1951

Alberto Giacometti, 1951.

Gordon Parks/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Robert Rauschenberg 1951

Robert Rauschenberg, 1951.

Wallace Kirklan/ Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Arshile Gorky 1945

Arshile Gorky, 1945.

Gjon Mili/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Barbara Hepworth 1964

Barbara Hepworth, 1964.

Paul Schutzer/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Eva Hesse 1969

Eva Hesse, 1969.

Henry Groskinsky/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Edward Hopper 1967

Edward Hopper, 1967.

John Loengard/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Edward Kienholz 1965

Edward Kienholz, 1965.

Ralph Crane/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Franz Kline 1954

Franz Kline, 1954.

Fritz Goro/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Fernand Leger 1949

Fernand Leger, 1949.

Gjon Mili/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Peter Max 1967

Peter Max, 1967.

Yale Joel/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Henry Moore 1946

Henry Moore, 1946.

Eliot Elisofon/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Isamu Noguchi 1946

Isamu Noguchi, 1946.

Eliot Elisofon/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Claes Oldenburg 1960

Claes Oldenburg, 1960.

Yale Joel/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Man Ray 1947

Man Ray, 1947.

Yale Joel/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Ad Reinhardt 1966

Ad Reinhardt, 1966.

John Loengard/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Auguste Renoir, 1919

Auguste Renoir, 1919.

Pictures Inc./Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Georges Rouault 1949

Georges Rouault, 1949.

Gjon Mili/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Richard Serra 1969

Richard Serra, 1969.

Henry Groskinsky/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Ben Shahn 1954

Ben Shahn, 1954.

Gjon Mili/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

Jacques Villon 1949

Jacques Villon, 1949.

Gjon Mili/Life Pictures/Shutterstock

The Great Blizzard of 1947: New York, Buried in White

Something about snowstorms brings out the kid in most of us. Memories of those blessed, reprieves from school “Snow day!” undoubtedly plays a part in the collective excitement, and whether it’s in a vast metropolis or a remote, small town, the prospect of a blizzard can elicit, along with some apprehension, great anticipation, a sense of thrill.

There’s concern, certainly, about our families, our neighbors, our power and heat, our ability to get out and about in the snow and its aftermath, but there can also be a pure, underlying excitement.

In December 1947, a huge, historic storm dumped record levels of snow on the northeastern United States. In New York City, where the snow fell quietly, and steadily, for hours and hours, several LIFE photographers stepped out of the magazine’s offices, cameras in hand, and recorded the scene. Here, we remember the Great Blizzard of 1947 with some photos that ran in LIFE, and many others that were never published in the magazine.

As LIFE put it to its readers in its Jan. 5, 1948, issue:

“At 3:20 in the morning it began to snow in New York City. By the time most New Yorkers were going to work the blanket lay three inches deep. But the city, used to ignoring all natural phenomena and reassured by a weather forecast of “occasional flurries,” went about its business. But as the day wore on this characteristic blasé attitude vanished. The air grew filled with snowflakes so huge and thick it was almost impossible to see across the street. They fell without letup all morning, all afternoon and into the night.

Long after night fall the illuminated news sign of the New York Times flashed an announcement to little groups of people huddled in Times Square that the snowfall, which totaled an amazing 25.8 inches in less than 24 hours, had beaten the record of the city’s historic blizzard of 1880. A faint, muffled shout of triumph went up from the victims.”

Liz Ronk edited this gallery for LIFE.com. Follow her on Twitter at @LizabethRonk.

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

A snowbound automobile in the middle of New York City’s West 22nd Street between a long line of other cars buried at the curb.

Andreas Feininger The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Andreas Feininger The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Michael Rougier The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Al Fenn The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Al Fenn The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

On the floor of Grand Central Station a father and his two young sons waited through the night for the train home.

Michael Rougier The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Michael Rougier The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Michael Rougier The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Al Fenn The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Michael Rougier The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Andreas Feininger The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Al Fenn/The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Al Fenn The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Blizzard, New York City, December 1947.

1947 Blizzard in New York City

Al Fenn The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

January 5, 1948 Issue of LIFE Magazine

January 5, 1948 Issue of LIFE Magazine

LIFE Magazine

WWII’s Battle of the Bulge: Rare and Powerful Photos

From mid-December 1944 through the end of January 1945, in the heavily forested Ardennes Mountains of Belgium, thousands of American, British, Canadian, Belgian and French forces struggled to turn back the final major German offensive of World War II. While Allied forces ultimately triumphed, it was a vicious six weeks of fighting, with tens of thousands dead on both sides. Today, the conflict is known as the Battle of the Bulge.

Here LIFE.com presents a series of photographs made by LIFE photographers throughout the fighting. Many of these pictures never ran in LIFE magazine, or anywhere else.

For its final offensive to succeed, Germany needed four factors to work in its favor: catching the Allies off-guard; poor weather that would neutralize air support for Allied troops; the dealing of early, devastating, demoralizing blows against the Allies; and capturing Allied fuel supplies intact. (Germany originally intended to attack on November 27, but had to delay its initial assault due to fuel shortages). On December 16, 1944, the German attack began: the Wehrmacht (the Third Reich’s unified armed forces) struck with 250,000 soldiers along an 85-mile stretch of Allied front, stretching from southern Belgium to Luxembourg.

The attack proved stunningly effective, at first, as troops advanced some 50 miles into Allied territory, creating the “bulge” in the American lines that gave the battle its memorable name.

American forces had been feeling triumphant—Paris had been liberated in August and there was a sense among some American and other Allied leaders that Germany was all but defeated. The attack in December 1944, officially labeled the “Ardennes-Alsace Campaign” by the U.S. Army, showed that any complacency  was dangerously misplaced.

Nevertheless, as effective as the initial German efforts were, they failed to achieve the complete and early knockout of Allied forces that German military brass had counted on. (Wehrmacht Field Marshal Walter Model had given the attack only a 10 percent chance of success to begin with. The German name for the operation: Wacht am Rhein, or “Watch on the Rhine.”)

One of the most difficult aspects of the Bulge was the weather, as extreme—indeed, historic—cold wreaked havoc and turned relatively simple logistics of travel, shelter, and meals into a daily struggle. January 1945 was the coldest January on record for that part of Europe, and over the course of the battle more than 15,000 Allied troops were treated for frostbite and other cold-related injuries.

Before the attack, some German troops who spoke English disguised themselves as Allied soldiers. They made a point of changing road signs and generally spreading misinformation. Germans who did that and were captured were executed by firing squad. A few images in this gallery chronicle one such execution. The three Germans, LIFE magazine reported in June 1945 when the U.S. War Department released the images were German intelligence officers who were captured, tried and shot.

“The Nazis were carefully groomed for their dangerous mission [LIFE wrote]. They spoke excellent English and their slang had been tuned up by close association with American prisoners of war in German camps… Under the rules of the Hague Convention these Germans were classifiable as spies and subject to an immediate court martial by a military tribunal. After brief deliberation American officers found them guilty, and ordered the usual penalty for spies: death by firing squad.”

Other German efforts at sabotage, meanwhile, proved largely ineffective, including attempts to bribe port and railroad workers to impede Allied supply operations.

Perhaps the defining moment in the Battle of the Bulge came when the Germans demanded the surrender of American troops who were outnumbered and surrounded in the town of Bastogne. United States General Anthony McAuliffe replied to the ultimatum with a now-legendary one-word response “Nuts!” His men withstood several German attacks until they could be relieved by the 4th Armored Division.

“This is undoubtedly the greatest American battle of the war,” Winston Churchill said in the House of Commons following the Battle of the Bulge, “and will, I believe, be regarded as an ever-famous American victory.”

While the Allied forces triumphed, victory came at a heavy price, with nearly 20,000 Americans killed and tens of thousands more wounded, missing or captured. British troops suffered more than 1,000 casualties. For American forces, the Bulge was the bloodiest battle on the Western Front during the Second World War.

German losses were severe, with estimates ranging from 70,000 to 100,000 casualties (depending on the source).

With victory on January 25, 1945, the final triumph over Nazi Germany was in reach; Allied forces pressed their advantage and began the last push toward Berlin. On May 7, Germany agreed to an unconditional surrender. Less than five months after the Battle of the Bulge ended, the war in Europe was over.

gallery by Liz Ronk

American troops in a snow-filled trench during the Battle of the Bulge.

American troops in a snow-filled trench during the Battle of the Bulge.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

American GI's chop a foxhole in the frozen ground by a haystack during the Battle of the Bulge. The machine gun was set up in preparation for a German counterattack, expected at any moment.

American GI’s chop a foxhole in the frozen ground by a haystack during the Battle of the Bulge. The machine gun was set up in preparation for a German counterattack, expected at any moment.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

An American artilleryman shaves in frigid cold, using a helmet for a shaving bowl, during the Battle of the Bulge, 1944.

An American artilleryman shaves in frigid cold, using a helmet for a shaving bowl, during the Battle of the Bulge, 1944.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

American troops man trenches along a snowy hedgerow in the northern Ardennes Forest during the Battle of the Bulge.

American troops man trenches along a snowy hedgerow in the northern Ardennes Forest during the Battle of the Bulge.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Allied troops around a fire in the Ardennes Forest during the Battle of the Bulge.

Allied troops around a fire in the Ardennes Forest during the Battle of the Bulge.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Shell craters left by an Allied barrage laid down to clean German infantry out of the woods and fields during the Battle of the Bulge, Belgium, 1944.

Shell craters left by an Allied barrage laid down to clean German infantry out of the woods and fields during the Battle of the Bulge, Belgium, 1944.

William Vandivert The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

American trucks and half-tracks in a snow-covered Ardennes field, Battle of the Bulge.

American trucks and half-tracks in a snow-covered Ardennes field, Battle of the Bulge.

William Vandivert The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Battle of the Bulge

Battle of the Bulge

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

German POWs on grave-digging duty during the Battle of the Bulge.

German POWs on grave-digging duty during the Battle of the Bulge.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Corpse beside a road during the Battle of the Bulge.

A corpse beside a road during the Battle of the Bulge.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

German military wreckage, Battle of the Bulge.

German military wreckage, Battle of the Bulge.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Frozen corpse of a German soldier killed during the Battle of the Bulge.

The frozen corpse of a German soldier killed during the Battle of the Bulge.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Allied troops and the German dead, Battle of the Bulge.

Allied troops and the German dead, Battle of the Bulge.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Some of the 115 Americans who, LIFE reported, were "massacred at point-blank range" in a field after being captured by Germans in the early days of the Battle of the Bulge, 1944. The soldiers were herded into a field and machine-gunned; when found, many of the frozen bodies still had their hands above their heads.

Some of the 115 Americans who, LIFE reported, were “massacred at point-blank range” in a field after being captured by Germans in the early days of the Battle of the Bulge, 1944. The soldiers were herded into a field and machine-gunned; when found, many of the frozen bodies still had their hands above their heads.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Belgian civilians are evacuated by American troops, 1944.

Belgian civilians are evacuated by American troops, 1944.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

An American tank moves past another gun carriage which slid off an icy road in the Ardennes Forest during the Battle of the Bulge, Dec. 20, 1944.

An American tank moves past another gun carriage which slid off an icy road in the Ardennes Forest during the Battle of the Bulge, Dec. 20, 1944.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Belgian residents of a northern Ardennes hamlet flee the fighting during the Battle of the Bulge, 1944.

Belgian residents of a northern Ardennes hamlet flee the fighting during the Battle of the Bulge, 1944.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

American GI, Battle of the Bulge.

American GI, Battle of the Bulge.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Previously unpublished portraits of American soldiers during the Battle of the Bulge, December 1944.

Portraits of American soldiers during the Battle of the Bulge, December 1944.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

American troops with Belgian children, Battle of the Bulge.

American troops with Belgian children, Battle of the Bulge.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A wounded German soldier rests on makeshift bedding after being taken prisoner during an attack on an American fuel depot on Dec. 16, 1944, the first day of the Battle of the Bulge.

A wounded German soldier rests on makeshift bedding after being taken prisoner during an attack on an American fuel depot on Dec. 16, 1944, the first day of the Battle of the Bulge.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Germans surrender during the Battle of the Bulge.

Germans surrender during the Battle of the Bulge.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

German POWs, Battle of the Bulge, January 1945.

German POWs, Battle of the Bulge, January 1945.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

German prisoners, some of them wearing coveralls for camouflage in the snow, are herded by guards. (In close fighting, U.S. troops also used snow-camouflage suits.)

German prisoners, some of them wearing coveralls for camouflage in the snow, are herded by guards. (In close fighting, U.S. troops also used snow-camouflage suits.)

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

Photographed on Dec. 23, 1944, but not published in LIFE until June 1945. Behind a cell block, German prisoners are bound to stakes by MPs. Tried and convicted as spies, they are about to be executed.

Photographed on Dec. 23, 1944, and published in LIFE in June 1945. Behind a cell block, German prisoners are bound to stakes by MPs. Tried and convicted as spies, they are about to be executed.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A blindfolded prisoner is securely bound, hand and foot, to a stake in front of a concrete wall. A large white paper target is pinned over his heart. American MPs stand at attention until the firing squad's commanding officer inspects the final arrangements. Belgium, 1944.

A blindfolded prisoner is securely bound, hand and foot, to a stake in front of a concrete wall. A large white paper target is pinned over his heart. American MPs stand at attention until the firing squad’s commanding officer inspects the final arrangements. Belgium, 1944.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

The volley is fired and three white puffs of smoke appear against the wall of the concrete block. The initial burst killed all three almost instantaneously. The firing squad, all military police, consisted of three groups of eight men, each with one additional marksman along as a spare.

The volley is fired and three white puffs of smoke appear against the wall of the concrete block. The initial burst killed all three almost instantaneously. The firing squad, all military police, consisted of three groups of eight men, each with one additional marksman along as a spare.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

A German shot as a spy in the early days of the Battle of the Bulge, 1944.

A German shot as a spy in the early days of the Battle of the Bulge, 1944.

John Florea The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

American troops in Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge.

American troops in Belgium during the Battle of the Bulge.

George Silk The LIFE Picture Collection/Shutterstock

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