Pedro Guerrero, Frank Lloyd Wright photographer
FLORENCE, Ariz. -- Photographer Pedro Guerrero, whose 20-year association with architect Frank Lloyd Wright launched a long fine-arts career that included capturing images of American artists, has died at age of 95.
Susan Guerrero said her father had cancer for several years and died Thursday at his home in Florence, Ariz.
Pedro Guerrero is mostly known for his images of Wright and the architect's work, but he also photographed the lives and works of artists Alexander Calder and Louise Nevelson.
After attending the Art Center School in Los Angeles, Guerrero got his first photography job after he visited Wright's home near Scottsdale in 1939.
His 15-minute interview with Wright opened up doors for him professionally for years to come. "He was open sesame, wherever I went," Guerrero said in 2001.
He worked as a photographer at the architect's homes in Scottsdale and Wisconsin for a year. Then, after serving in the Army Air Corps during World War II, he returned to his work as Wright's photographer until the architect's death in 1959.
He published books on Wright, including one in 1994, "Picturing Wright: An Album from Frank Lloyd Wright's Photographer," and on Calder and Nevelson.
Guerrero also did freelance work for magazines such as House and Garden, Vogue and Harper's Bazaar.
He is survived by three children and his wife, Dixie L. Guerrero.
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