Advertisement
“We are all heartbroken by the confirmation of our beloved Peter’s death,” his family said in a statement.
“Beard, who was suffering from dementia,” went missing on March 31.
“A hunter found his remains over the weekend in a remote wooded area of a state park in Long Island, east of New York City,” local police said.
Related Articles
Advertisement
Known for his death-defying images of African fauna, Beard’s text and photo book “The End of the Game,” first published in 1965, captured the destruction of a continent long seen by colonialists as a treasure chest.
A man as wild as his photographs, Beard had a brush with death when he was trampled by an elephant in the 1990s and was known to rope rhinoceroses.
“Peter was an extraordinary man who led an exceptional life. He lived life to the fullest; he squeezed every drop out of every day,” his family said.
“He was an intrepid explorer, unfailingly generous, charismatic, and discerning. Peter defined what it means to be open: open to new ideas, new encounters, new people, new ways of living and being,” the statement continued.
“He died where he lived: in nature.”
Born into privilege on January 22, 1938 in Manhattan, Beard attended some of the US east coast’s most elite private schools but was by his own account the family’s black sheep.
Respected for his photography Beard received solo shows at Manhattan’s International Center of Photography, as well as Paris’ Centre National de la Photographie he also gained notoriety for his high-octane social life.
Beard was a regular at the iconic Studio 54 disco club and a mainstay in the fashion world, famously discovering the model Iman in Kenya and photographing some of the world’s top supermodels and carrying on high-profile dalliances with several of them.
He had well-documented trysts with both Candice Bergen and Lee Radziwill, Jackie Kennedy’s sister, and was married three times.
“It’s marvelous that death is an end, what’s the matter with that?” he said during the 1977 opening of his ICP show.
“We have plenty of time to live; we have plenty of time to have fun and really get into things. I have absolutely no fear of dying — it’s one of the most natural processes there is.