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Legendary Hip Hop Photographer Chi Modu Passed Away From Cancer at 54

Billboard- Chi Modu, the acclaimed photographer who captured some of the most iconic images in hip hop, has died. He was 54.

His death was announced in a post on his official Instagram account on Saturday. “Our hearts are broken. We continue the fight. The family request privacy at this time,” the post reads. No cause of death or further details were provided.

Rising to prominence in the 1990s, Modu became the director of photography at The Source magazine which saw him shoot a host of up-and-coming and soon-to-be-legendary artists from hip hop’s golden age including the likes of Nas, Mary J. Blige, LL Cool J, Ice Cube, Dr Dre, Snoop Dogg, Notorious B.I.G. and Wu-Tang amongst many others. His iconic black and white pictures of a shirtless Tupac Shakur, in particular, have arguably become the enduring image of the rapper in the public’s consciousness.

Born in Nigeria in July 1966, Modu was raised in New Jersey. He attended Rutgers University, graduating in 1989 with a degree in economics. It was at Rutgers that he began to dabble in photography and upon leaving college he studied the medium at Manhattan’s International Center of Photography. His first job as a photographer was at Harlem-based New York Amsterdam News.

In the early 1990s, he joined The Source, one of the premier hip hop magazines, and rose to become the director of photography. Influenced by the likes of Roy Decarava and André Kertész, he was known for capturing candid, unguarded images of artists, many of whom had never been shot professionally before. In all, Modu shot 30 covers for The Source during what many consider to be hip hop’s golden age. His images documented both artists at the peak of their powers such as Biggie Smalls and Tupac as well as capturing unknown up-and-coming acts who would later go on to dominate the charts and the culture in the 2000s and beyond.

In addition to his work for The Source, he shot photography on album covers for a number of artists including Snoop Dogg (Doggystyle), Method Man (Tical), Mobb Deep (The Infamous) and Black Moon (Enta Da Stage). He also worked for Rolling Stone and The New York Times.

In 2016, he published his celebrated photobook Tupac Shakur: Uncategorized, which featured pictures of the rapper from their first meeting in Atlanta in 1994 (images from which were later used as the cover for an issue of Rolling Stone in 2012) to his signing for Death Row records nine months before his death in 1996.

You may not know the name, but if you grew up in the 90s, or are a fan of hip-hop from the 90s, you know this man's work.

Some of the best photographs of musicians all time.

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That's just a few.

This guy immigrated here from Nigeria, to New Jersey, put himself through Rutgers which is where he fell in love with photography. From there he found his way to a small upstart hip hop magazine started out of a dorm room at Harvard called The Source. 

He became its head of photography and in the process delivered to the world some of the most iconic candid images of the greatest rappers of all time.

Rest In Peace Chi. 

Jerritt Clark. Getty Images.

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