![]() ![]() ![]() “One Ride with Yankee Papa 13” has been called perhaps “the greatest photo-essay ever made.” After Burrows’s death, LIFE Managing Editor Ralph Graves stated, “I do not think it is demeaning to any other photographer in the world for me to say that Larry Burrows was the single bravest and most dedicated war photographer I know of. His images are nothing short of timeless. The cruelties of war 1864 Leather Bound Skip to main. Then, in 1962, he began nine years of documenting a beautiful land seized by war: Vietnam. The cruelties of war 1864 Leather Bound A churchman on. From Suez to Lebanon, Cyprus to the Congo, he became versed in the cruelties of war. In the years leading up to the Civil War, the black church found its. Time spent in the museums of Europe served him well, honing his own artist’s eye-and a masterly appreciation for color-for his life’s work: the battlefield. The church contains in full the kindness and cruelty, the fierce intelligence and. Early on as he was learning his craft, he thought nothing of repeating an entire day’s work to get the job done right. or pillage of a church or an attack on a churchman, as well as forcing any. Larry Burrows (1926-1971) was born in London to a hardworking railway employee, and as Larry’s Britishness never waned, neither did his industry. cruelty and disregard of human claims prevalent among the ancient races. ![]() (Photo by Larry Burrows/The LIFE Picture Collection © Meredith Corporation) ![]()
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