Baldwin was born on Jan. 25, 1929, in
Lausanne to Margaret (Gamble) Baldwin and Frederick William Baldwin, who was a career foreign service officer with the
U.S. State Department and served as consul general of the
U.S. embassy in Havana. He served as a Marine rifleman during the
Korean War and fought in the
Battle of Chosin Reservoir. Baldwin dropped out of the
University of Virginia following his freshman year and graduated from
Columbia University in 1956. As a student at Columbia, he got to interview
Pablo Picasso by writing a letter with his own illustrations that appealed to Picasso's sense of humor. In 1963, Baldwin witnessed a civil rights march in
Savannah, Georgia and for the next two years, he volunteered to photograph events for civil rights leader
Hosea Williams. The next year, Baldwin and Watriss traveled across the country to photograph and write about rural America. The couple first settled in a
Texas farm, where they spent 15 years living in a 13-foot trailer for a
National Endowment for the Humanities-funded photo and oral history project documenting the rural poor, resulting in a 1991 book
Coming to Terms: The German Hill Country of Texas. A collection of his work is stored in the Briscoe Center for American History at the
University of Texas at Austin. In 1983, Baldwin and his wife co-founded FotoFest in Houston, an arts organization dedicated to giving visibility to photographers from the parts of the world other than
Europe and
North America and providing biennial exhibition opportunities for photographers beyond established museums and commercial galleries. In 2019, Baldwin published a memoir,
Dear Mr. Picasso: An Illustrated Love Affair With Freedom. Baldwin died on December 15, 2021, at age 92. ==References==