Acclaimed photographer Larry Fink, whose work ranged from family portraits and political satire to insights into working class lives and the showbusiness elite, has died aged 82.
Gallery owner Robert Mann told The Associated Press that Fink died on Saturday at his home in Martins Creek, Pennsylvania.
Mr Mann did not cite a specific cause of death, but said that Fink had been in failing health.
“I’ve known people like Robert Frank and Ansel Adams and Larry stood out. He was an exceptional and unique individual, a very unconventional man, not only in his personality, but in his photography.”
A “self-described Marxist from Long Island,” Fink was best known for Social Graces, a 1979 exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in which black and white photos of wealthy New Yorkers were juxtaposed against shots of everyday life of families in Martins Creek, Fink’s home town. The series was published in book form in 1984.
He would also spoof President George W Bush and other political leaders, while remaining close to a Martin Creeks family, the Sabatines, who appeared often in his work.
Fink had solo exhibitions at the Whitney Museum and the Philadelphia Museum of Art among other galleries, and he received numerous honours, including two John Simon Guggenheim Fellowships.
He grew up in a politicised family that scorned the free market, while also enjoying stylish automobiles and high-end parties.
In the early 1960s, Fink moved to Greenwich Village in New York City, with dreams that he was undertaking not just a career, but a revolution.
Fink is survived by his second wife, the artist Martha Posner, and a daughter, Molly, from his marriage to painter Joan Snyder.