Corky Lee, known for photographing Asian America, dead at 73

“His passion was to rediscover, document and champion through his images the plight of all Americans but most especially that of Asian and Pacific Islanders,” Lee’s family said.

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In this May 10, 2014 file photo, photographer Corky Lee shouts to the Chinese community posing near the Golden Spike re-enactment ceremony, in Promontory, Utah, as he makes a photo of them to honor Chinese immigrants who built the railroad from the west.

In this May 10, 2014 file photo, photographer Corky Lee shouts to the Chinese community posing near the Golden Spike re-enactment ceremony, in Promontory, Utah, as he makes a photo of them to honor Chinese immigrants who built the railroad from the west. Lee, a photojournalist who spent five decades spotlighting the often ignored Asian and Pacific Islander American communities, died Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2021, in Queens, New York of complications due to COVID-19. He was 73.

AP

Corky Lee, a photojournalist who spent five decades spotlighting the often ignored Asian and Pacific Islander American communities, has died. He was 73.

Mr. Lee died Wednesday in New York City’s Queens borough of complications from COVID-19, according to his family.

“His passion was to rediscover, document and champion through his images the plight of all Americans but most especially that of Asian and Pacific Islanders,” his family said.

The self-described “undisputed unofficial Asian American Photographer Laureate,” Mr. Lee used his eye to pursue what he saw as “photographic justice.” Almost always sporting a camera around his neck, he was present at many seminal moments impacting Asian America over a 50-year career.

He was born Young Kwok Lee in New York City to Chinese immigrant parents. He was the first child in his family to go to college, graduating from City University of New York’s Queens College.

A self-taught freelance photographer, Mr. Lee aimed his camera lens on subjects from anti-Vietnam war protests to police brutality. Over the years, his photos have been published by The New York Times, Time magazine, the New York Post, New York Daily News, The Associated Press and Asian American outlets. Recently, he was documenting anti-Asian racism brought on by the pandemic.

Mr. Lee was there when Asian Americans took to the streets to protest the lack of jail time for the killers of Vincent Chin. The 27-year-old Chin was beaten to death in Detroit in 1982, a time when Japan was being blamed for the U.S. auto industry’s decline. The two laid-off white autoworkers who killed Chin — who was Chinese — assumed he was Japanese. They were convicted of manslaughter but got just three years of probation.

In 2017, Mr. Lee organized a vigil outside the Nevada home of one of Chin’s attackers.

An event that had an indelible influence on Mr. Lee’s desire for more Asian representation was the building of the Transcontinental Railroad. In previous interviews, Mr. Lee spoke of being in junior high and coming across a picture from the 1869 completion of the railroad in Utah. The iconic “Champagne Photo” featured almost no Chinese workers, even though they made up the majority of the labor.

In 2002, Mr. Lee gathered some of those laborers’ descendants in the same spot for a reenactment. More than a nice gesture, he felt the anniversary photograph was restoring Asians into the history of the country they helped build. He went on to recreate the photo on more than one anniversary.

Mr. Lee also believed in paying it forward to Asian American journalists coming after him. He was a founding member of the New York chapter of the Asian American Journalists Association. He is credited with helping raise more than $100,000 in scholarship funds through annual photo auctions.

“AAJA is heartbroken over the loss of our beloved Corky Lee, a trailblazer whose career has been instrumental to our collective understanding and appreciation of the history, triumphs and struggles of Asian America,” AAJA President Michelle Ye Hee Lee said in a statement.

Mr. Lee is survived by his brother John.

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