In pictures: 'Eye of Istanbul' photographer Ara Guler dies at 90

  • Published

One of Turkey's best known photojournalists, Ara Guler, has died at the age of 90.

Nicknamed The Eye of Istanbul, Ara Guler chronicled the city with melancholic black-and-white pictures taken mostly with a Leica camera. He died in hospital in Istanbul on Wednesday after suffering heart failure, Anadolu news agency said.

Image source, Getty Images

Guler, who was born to ethnic Armenian parents, began his career as a photographer on a Turkish newspaper and in the 1950s he was appointed Time-Life magazine's Near East correspondent.

He went on to meet famous photographers such as Marc Riboud and Henri Cartier-Bresson, who signed him up to the celebrated photo agency Magnum.

His photographs captured the rapidly changing face of Istanbul - its best known landmarks as well as images of workers going about their daily routine. His work also took him around the world.

Image source, Ara Guler / Magnum Photos
Image caption,
Kumkapi fishermen returning to port in the first light of dawn. 1950
Image source, Ara Guler / Magnum Photos
Image caption,
Salacak landing-stage and Istanbul silhouette, 1968
Image source, Ara Guler / Magnum Photos
Image caption,
Nightfall in the district of Zeyrek, Istanbul, 1960

"People call me an Istanbul photographer but I am a citizen of the world. I am a world photographer," he once said.

Guler photographed many world figures including British wartime leader Winston Churchill; Indian stateswoman Indira Gandhi; philosopher Bertrand Russell; film director Alfred Hitchcock and the artist Pablo Picasso.

Image source, Ara Guler / Magnum Photos
Image caption,
Alfred Hitchcock in his office at the Universal Studios in Los Angeles in 1974
Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,
Ara Guler mimics a gesture from his portrait of Pablo Picasso
Image source, Ara Guler
Image caption,
The US playwright Tennessee Williams was photographed by Guler on a visit to Istanbul in the 1950s

Guler also photographed Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan in 2015. The president contacted the photographer's family to offer his condolences and said that Guler would always be remembered for his work, Anadolu reported.

Image source, Getty Images

Earlier this year, a photography museum opened in Guler's name in Istanbul and organisers used the event to mark the photographer's 90th birthday - with a cake.

Image source, Getty Images

All images are subject to copyright.