Gilbert Baker, an artist based in San Francisco who created the rainbow flag as a symbol for the gay community, has died aged 65.
The San Francisco Chronicle said Baker died in his sleep at his home in New York on Thursday night.
He initially designed an eight-colour flag in 1978 for the city’s gay freedom day, the precursor to the modern pride parade.
The rainbow flag has been raised in central San Francisco to honour him.
It is flying near Harvey Milk Plaza, named after America’s first openly gay politician, a close friend of Baker before his assassination in 1978.
Baker’s close friend Cleve Jones said on Twitter: “My dearest friend in the world is gone. Gilbert Baker gave the world the Rainbow Flag; he gave me forty years of love and friendship.”
Screenwriter Dustin Lance Black, who wrote the screenplay for Milk, the biopic of the politician, tweeted: “Rainbows weep. Our world is far less colourful without you, my love. Gilbert Baker gave us the rainbow flag to unite us. Unite again.”
California State Senator Scott Weiner said Baker’s work had “helped define the modern LGBT movement”.
“Rest in power, Gilbert,” he said.
According to his website, Baker was born in Kansas in 1951 and served in the US army from 1970 to 1972, which stationed him in San Francisco in the early days of the gay liberation movement.
He was honourably discharged, taught himself to sew and began a flag-making career which would include creating designs and displays for several world leaders including the presidents of France, Venezuela and the Philippines.
Baker said he wanted to convey the idea of diversity and inclusion, using “something from nature to represent that our sexuality is a human right”.
In 2015, New York’s Museum of Modern Art acquired the flag for its design collection, calling it a “powerful design milestone”.
“I decided that we should have a flag, that a flag fit us as a symbol, that we are a people, a tribe if you will,” Baker told the Museum in an interview.
“And flags are about proclaiming power, so it’s very appropriate.”
Courtesy: BBC