TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 1月19日 08時36分


Photojournalists become celebrities by creating images that shape the way we see the world. Photo editors, away from the limelight, shape the way those images are presented. And Barbara Baker Burrows, who died of a rare brain disease on Jan. 10, at 73, chose the pictures that told some of the century’s biggest stories. After joining @life's staff in 1966, Burrows—seen here in her Time & Life Building office in the mid-1980s—earned a reputation for never closing a story until it had exactly the right image, and for often finding it too. But her half-century at Time Inc. was distinguished by more than her encyclopedic knowledge of photography: she turned colleagues into family. "She was the mother of LIFE magazine—she cared for all the photographers," photographer Harry Benson told TIME after Burrows' death. "She remembered pictures that never made the final cut, which years later would take on a whole new meaning for a new story she was working on." Burrows once said she pinched herself sometimes, because working at LIFE felt like a dream. But that extended "family" knew that couldn’t be the case: her magic worked because there was, at its heart, something very real. Photograph by Tobey Sanford


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