BackGround
By age 15, he would sneak away to the CTA train and head downtown to Chicago to shoot candid imagery of people as well as the beautiful architecture and buildings that make up the Windy City. At 16, he formed Gary Suson Photography and began shooting portraits for neighbors. By age 17, Suson won the highest honor for any high school student in the USA: He won the Kodak Medallion as part of the National Scholastics Art & Writing Awards. Two of his award-winning images were flown to New York City and put on display for 3 months at the World Trade Center.
After one year of college in Texas, Suson left prematurely to take a chance on New York City. He began shooting as a test photographer for the famed Company Model Management and was schooled personally by agency founder, frenchman Maurice Etteles.
Suson’s career took a sudden and jarring halt when terrorists flew airplanes into the World Trade Center on the morning of September 11, 2001. Mr. Suson grabbed his camera and began documenting immediately. Driving around the Ground Zero site with friends in the NYPD, Suson documented as close as possible without actually stepping foot into the highly restricted areas.
The Eyes of Ground Zero: A Photographer's Sacred Mission
One Man’s Mission at Ground Zero
Shortly thereafter, Barnes & Noble Publishing produced Suson’s coffee table book, “Requiem: Images of Ground Zero.” The most expensive book to produce in Barnes & Noble Book’s history, Requiem was endorsed by a dozen 9/11 FDNY family members and forwarded by highly respected FDNY Battalion Chief Joseph W. Pfeifer, who was the first to arrive & set up command at the World Trade Center on 9/11.
In 2003, Mr. Suson was given the Fire Department’s highest honor for a civilian: He was nominated by FDNY Chief of Department Daniel A. Nigro to become an Honorary Battalion Chief. In January of 2004 – at FDNY Headquarters in Brooklyn – Suson, surrounded by numerous firefighter friends he had dug with at Ground Zero, was sworn in on the Bible and appointed by FDNY Commissioner Scoppetta to the title of FDNY Honorary Battalion Chief. Suson stopped shooting photography in May, 2002 due to health concerns related to his 7 months spent at Ground Zero. He continues to live in New York City.