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DAVID HUME KENNERLY ARCHIVE CREATION PROJECT 50 YEARS BEHIND THE SCENES OF HISTORY

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DAVID HUME KENNERLY ARCHIVE CREATION PROJECT

50 YEARS BEHIND THE SCENES OF HISTORY

The David Hume Kennerly Archive is an extraordinary collection of images, objects and recollections created and collected by a great American photographer, journalist, artist and historian documenting 50 years of United States and world history.

The goal of the DAVID HUME KENNERLY ARCHIVE CREATION PROJECT is to protect, organize and share its rare and historic objects – and to transform its half-century of images into a cutting-edge digital educational tool that is fully searchable and available to the public for research and artistic appreciation.

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Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist David Hume Kennerly has spent his career documenting the people and events that have defined the world. The last photographer hired by Life Magazine, he has also worked for Time, People, Newsweek, Paris Match, Der Spiegel, Politico, ABC, NBC, CNN and served as Chief White House Photographer for President Gerald R. Ford.

Kennerly’s images convey a deep understanding of the forces shaping history and are a peerless repository of exclusive primary source records that will help educate future generations. His collection comprises a sweeping record of a half-century of history and culture – as if Margaret Bourke-White had continued her work through the present day.

DAVID HUME KENNERLY

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The David Hume Kennerly collection of photography, historic artifacts, letters and objects might be one of the largest and most historically significant private collections ever produced and collected by a single individual. Its 50-year span of images and objects tells the complete story of the baby boom generation. Like the Zapruder film of JFK’s assassination or Woodward and Bernstein’s Watergate papers, many of the objects and images in Kennerly’s collection constitute the only primary source record in existence of historic events.

HISTORICAL SIGNIFICANCE

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Kennerly’s deep understanding of the forces shaping our world drove him to seek out opportunities to document history that others missed. Often he was the only person in the room other than participants themselves. His lists of exclusive situations or images include the end of the Vietnam War, Jonestown, Reagan and Gorbachev’s Fireside Summit, in the Pentagon’s secret video conferencing room with the Secretary of Defense during the Iraq war, with McCain the night he won the New Hampshire primary, election night 2000 with Bush and Cheney, the aftermath of 9/11 at the Pentagon, Donald Rumsfeld’s visit to Abu Ghraib, the final episode of the television show Seinfeld and more. Kennerly’s collection includes portraits and behind-the-scenes documentation of hundreds of notable world figures, including every president since Richard Nixon, dozens of elections, congressional crises, wars, and a host of major national and international events. It also contains a vast but little-known collection of images chronicling American life, landscape and nature.

THE OTHER PERSON IN THE ROOM

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Kennerly is alone in maintaining his career at the very highest levels while creating an uninterrupted visual record of a half-century of history. With his first photograph published in 1962, Kennerly started his career in the black & white pre-motordrive era. He not only survived the war in Vietnam, but also the independent contractor transition of the 1980s when he was able to maintain ownership of his photographs. He continued shooting and was able to seamlessly make the shift from film to digital in the early 2000’s at a time when many of his cohorts were ready to retire or found themselves unemployed with the decline of print journalism. And Kennerly continues to add to his archive, currently covering his 12th presidential election, this time for CNN.

COHORT OF ONE

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In addition to the extraordinary images and rare vintage prints, The David Hume Kennerly collection also includes an extraordinary number of unique objects that Kennerly collected throughout his fifty-year journey such as the cameras with which he photographed his Pulitzer Prize-winning images in Vietnam, press passes, passports, flight records, caption envelopes, art and extraordinary objects and letters signed by world leaders.

MORE THAN IMAGES

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OREGON JOURNAL, UPI First published photo in 1962 in the Roseburg High School “Orange R” school newspaper. The Pendleton Roundup; Tyghe Valley Indian Rodeo; Tigard shootout; The Supremes; Miles Davis in Portland; The Rolling Stones in Portland on their first U.S. tour; Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul-Jabbar) playing during his first year at UCLA; USC star O.J. Simpson after winning the Heisman Trophy; Igor Stravinsky; police with guns drawn at San Francisco State College; anti-war demonstrations, escaped prisoner from San Quentin gunned down by police; 1968 U.S. presidential campaign candidates Richard Nixon, Hubert Humphrey, Gene McCarthy; Ambassador Hotel the night Sen. Robert Kennedy was assassinated; Congressman Adam Clayton Powell’s anti-war speech; Hugh Hefner surrounded by Playmates; pitchers Denny McLain and Bob Gibson during their 1968 Cy Young-winning seasons; U.S. Open tennis championships at Forest Hills; Eisenhower’s funeral; Mickey Mantle Day; Mets winning the ’69 World Series; construction of the World Trade Center.

1960s 1980s

HISTORY CAPTURED - HIGHLIGHTS

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1970s

TIME, LIFE, CHIEF WHITE HOUSE PHOTOGRAPHER President Nixon made Kennerly a martini at the White House on Christmas Eve 1970. First ride on Air Force One at 23. Ringside at Ali-Frazier fight, Madison Square Garden. Vietnam for UPI; war between India and Pakistan; 1972 Pulitzer Prize in Journalism for Feature Photography; one of first Americans to enter PRC; release of the last American POWs in Hanoi; resignation of Richard Nixon; Gerald R. Ford’s Chief White House photographer; special mission to Vietnam and Cambodia right before those countries fell to the Communists; Kissinger’s last Mideast shuttle; in the room as President Ford ended US involvement in Vietnam; 1976 presidential campaign; Sadat’s historic trip to Israel for TIME; Camp David Summit; Northern Ireland hostilities; Osiris nuclear reactor being built outside of Baghdad that was later blown up by the Israelis; Havana for Fidel Castro; Jonestown mass murder and suicides; Exhibition at the Lunn Gallery in Washington, D.C. attended by Ansel Adams and Yousef Karsh.

TIME, FREELANCE War in El Salvador; 1980 presidential election; Reagan White House for TIME; Kennerly’s autobiography Shooter published; return of American Iran hostages to U.S.; Sandra Day O’Conner sworn in as first female justice of the Supreme Court; Morocco’s war with Polisario; U.S. Marines in Beirut; on patrol with PFLP fighters in hills above Beirut; funeral of assassinated politician Benigno “Ninoy” Aquino in Manila; 1984 Olympics; America’s Cup in Australia; 1984 presidential election; exclusive coverage of Reagan/Gorbachev “Fireside Summit” in Geneva; A Day in the Life of America; won Overseas Press Club Award for Reagan/Gorbachev coverage; A Day in the Life of the Soviet Union; with Pope John Paul II on his plane to Italy; 1988 presidential election; Emmy nomination for NBC movie, The Taking of Flight 847: The Uli Derickson Story, writer/exec producer of NBC movie Shooter starring Helen Hunt (Emmy winner for Best Cinematography); Tienanmen Square and the Forbidden City for A Day in the Life of China.

LIFE, FREELANCE, NEWSWEEK, GEORGE MAGAZINE, ABC Defense Secretary Dick Cheney and Chairman of Joint Chiefs Colin Powell in Saudi Arabia in prelude to Desert Storm; five presidents at Reagan Library; 1992 presidential campaign; the Oval Office as it transitions from Bush to Clinton; Nixon’s funeral; 1994 Olympics in Norway; book Photo Op published; exhibition of work at the Portland Art Museum in Oregon and Cannon House Office Building Rotunda at the U.S. Capitol; 1996 presidential campaign; Bill Clinton presidential coverage; Pyongyang, North Korea; Sen. John Glenn’s preparation for space shuttle flight as the oldest astronaut; the launch of SDS-95; Pope John Paul II’s trip to Cuba; Clinton impeachment story; the last two Seinfeld episodes exclusive for Newsweek; Seinoff: The Final Days of Seinfeld published; Clinton’s Senate trial; King Hussein funeral in Jordan; Kosovo war; inside coverage at NATO HQ with Supreme Commander General Wesley Clark; Macedonia; French aircraft carrier in Mediterranean; Northridge earthquake; People’s Republic of China’s 50th Anniversary Celebration.

1990s 2010s

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2000s

NEWSWEEK, DER SPEIGEL, PARIS MATCH, NBC 2000 presidential campaign; inside photos at governor’s mansion election night in Austin with the Bushes; Picture-a-Day in the year 2000 project; retrospective show at Visa Pour l’Image, Perpignan, France; Slovenia Summit with Presidents Bush and Putin; 9/11 attack on Pentagon; to Afghanistan to photograph that conflict; exec producer of ABC’s Profiles from the Front Lines about U.S. Special Forces in Afghanistan; Photo du Jour published; exhibition of Photo du Jour at the Smithsonian Arts & Industry Building; inside the Pentagon at the start of the Iraq War; secret trip to Iraq with Secretary of Defense; 2004 presidential campaign; Rumsfeld’s trip to Abu Ghraib; named “one of the one hundred most important people in photography,” by American Photo Magazine; Extraordinary Circumstances: The Presidency of Gerald R. Ford published; 2008 presidential campaign; becomes trustee of the Gerald R. Ford Foundation; producer, chief photographer, Barack Obama: The Official Inaugural Book; five Presidents in the Oval Office with Barack Obama.

FREELANCE, DER SPIEGEL, POLITICO, CNN Ramadi and Karbala in Iraq; Iceland, Costa Rica and France for Backroads; Girl Scouts photos appear on millions of cookie boxes; New Orleans for post Katrina coverage; featured speaker at the Aspen Ideas Festival; 2012 presidential campaign; Mitt Romney and his running mate Paul Ryan; Betty Ford funeral; Haiti, Northern Ireland, London, India, Singapore, Indonesia, Poland, South Africa, Swaziland, Japan, for Vital Voices; TEDx Bend speaker; producer, Discovery Channel’s The Presidents’ Gatekeepers about White House chiefs of staff; President Obama’s second Inauguration; David Hume Kennerly on the iPhone published; King Abdullah II meeting with President Obama; commencement address and honorary doctorate, Lake Erie College; executive producer, CBS/Showtime documentary The Spymasters: CIA in the Crosshairs; featured speaker at the annual Bank of America board meeting; recipient of 2015 Lucie Award for Achievement in Photojournalism, presented at Carnegie Hall; 2016 presidential campaign; Bernie v. Hillary CNN Debate, Brooklyn.

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar • King Abdullah II of Jordan • Ansel Adams • Eddie Adams • Spiro Agnew • Hafez Al-Assad • Madeline Albright • Jason Alexander • Muhammad Ali • Samuel Alito • Richard Allen • John Anderson • Jennifer Aniston • Yasser Arafat • Neil Armstrong • John Ashcroftl • Les Aspin • Fred Astaire • Tariq Aziz • Joan Baez • Pearl Bailey • Howard Baker • James Baker III • Menachem Begin • Candice Bergen • Sandy Berger, NSC Director • Joseph Bernardin • Yogi Berra • Ali Bhutto • Joe Biden • Tony Blair • Joshua Bolten • Frank Borman • Erskine Bowles • Bill Bradley • James Brady • Tom Brady • John Brennan • William J. Brennan • Stephen Breyer • Leonid Brezhnev • Eli Broad • Jim Brown • Pat Buchanan • Warren Burger • Arthur Burns • George Burns • Richard Burton • Barbara Bush • George H.W. Bush • George W. Bush • Jeb Bush • Laura Bush • Earl Butz • Robert Byrd • Jane Byrne • Joseph Califano • James Callaghan • John Cappelletti • Andy Card • King Juan Carlos of Spain • Stokely Carmichael • Jose Carrares • Ben Carson • Jimmy Carter • William Casey • Fidel Castro • Nicolae Ceausescu • Suzy Chafee • Charles, Prince of Wales • Eddie Cheever • Dick Cheney • Lynne Cheney • Konstantin Chernenko • Jacques Chirac • Chris Christie • Warren Christopher • William Clark • Wesley Clark • Bill Clinton • Bill Cohen • William Colby • William Coleman • Charles Colson • John Connally • King Constantine II of Greece • Bill Cosby • Archibald Cox • Courtney Cox • Walter Cronkite • Ted Cruz • Jamie Lee Curtis • Robert Cushman • Bill Daley • Tom Daschle • Larry David • Miles Davis • Moshe Dayan • Michael Deaver • Miguel del la Madrid • Ron Dellums • Suleyman Demirel • George Deukmejian • John Deutch • John Doar • Anatoly Dobrynin • Bob Dole • Elizabeth Dole • Placido Domingo • Pham Van Dong • William O. Douglas • Julia Louis Dreyfus • Kenneth Duberstein • Lawrence Eagleburger • Clint Eastwood • John Edwards • Julie Eisenhower • Michael Eisner • Rahm Emanuel • Zhou Enlai • Sam Ervin • Ismail Fahmey • Mia Farrow • Martin Feldstein • Carly Fiorina • Leonard Firestone • Mary Fisher • Emerson Fittipaldi • Steve Forbes • Betty Ford • Gerald R. Ford • Abe Fortas • Vicente Fox • Francisco Franco • Tommy Franks • Malcolm Fraser • Joe Frazier • Dr. Bill Frist • Robert Gates • Richard Gebhard • Amin Gemayel • Hans-Dietrich Genscher • Ron Gettelfinger • Edmund Giambastiani • Edward Gierek • Newt Gingrich • Ruth BaderGinsburg • Valery Giscard d’Estaing • John Glenn • Arthur Goldberg • Barry Goldwater • Mikhail Gorbachev • Raisa Gorbachev • Al Gore • R.C. Gorman • Porter Goss • Billy Graham • Alan Greenspan • Andrei Gromyko • King Carl Gustav XVI of Sweden • Phillip Habib • Chuck Hagel • Alexander Haig • H.R. Bob Haldeman • Armand Hammer • Tonya Harding • Bryce Harlow • Mel Harris • George Harrison • Arthur Hartman • King Hassan II of Morocco • Orrin Hatch • Dennis Hatert • Mark Hatfield • Pavel Havel • Michael Hayden • Tom Hayden • Wayne Hays • Christie Hefner • Jesse Helms • Richard Helms • Margaux Hemingway • Emperor Hirohito of Japan • Gil Hodges • Dustin Hoffman • Bob Hope • Huell Howser • Mike Huckabee • E. Howard Hunt • Jon Huntsman • King Hussein of Jordan • Lee Iacocca • Julio Iglesias • Jesse Jackson • Kate Jackson • Michael Jackson • Mick Jagger • Leon Jaworski • Michel Jobert • Pope John Paul II • James Earl Jones • Quincy Jones • Hamilton Jordan • Michael Jordan • John Kasich • Ken Kaunda • Gene Kelly • Grace Kelly • Jack Kemp • Anthony Kennedy • Caroline Kennedy • Ethel Kennedy • John Kennedy, Jr. • Robert F. Kennedy • Ted Kennedy • Nancy Kerrigan

HISTORICAL FIGURES PHOTOGRAPHED

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John Kerry • King Khalid of Saudi Arabia • Young-sam Kim • Henry Kissinger • Wayne Knight • Helmut Kohl • Ted Koppel • Tom Korologos • Lisa Kudrow • Nguyen Cao Ky • Mel Laird • Rod Laver • Patrick Leahy • Matt LeBlanc • Jack Lemmon • Jacob Lew • Carl Lewis • Joe Lewis • Patrick Lichfield • Joe Lieberman • John V. Lindsay • Joe Lockhart • Trent Lott • Jeff MacNelly • Norman Mailer • John Major • Makarios III • Fred Malek • David Mamet • Marcel Marceau • Ferdinand Marcos • Imelda Marcos • Thurgood Marshall • Steve Martin • John McCain • Gene McCarthy • Matthew McConaughey • Mike McCurry • Denis McDonough • Denny McLain • Mack McLarty • Edwin Meese • Zubin Mehta • Golda Meir • Nicholas Meyer • John Mitchell • Francois Mitterand • Walter Mondale • Thomas Moorer • Aldo Moro • Hosni Mubarak • Edmund Muskie • Carl Mydans • Richard Myers • Jim Nabors • Bob Nardelli • Gaafar Nimeiry • Paul Nitze • Richard Nixon • Lon Nol • Hideo Nomo • Sandra Day O’Conner • Paul O’Neill • Tip O’Neill • Ed O’Neill • Michelle Obama • Barack Obama • Aristotle Onassis • Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis • Antonio Ordonez • Daniel Ortega • Mohammad Reza Pahlavi • Ian Paisley • Leon Panetta • Chung-hee Park • Rand Paul • Ron Paul • Luciano Pavarotti • Charles Percy • Shimon Peres • H. Ross Perot • Matthew Perry • Rick Perry • David Petraeus • Michelle Pfeiffer • Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh • Kim Phuc • Lou Piniella • John Podesta • Pope Paul IV • Adam Clayton Powell • Colin Powell • Jody Powell • Lewis Powell • Billy Preston • Richard Pryor • Qaboos bin Said al Said • Dan Quayle • Queen Elizabeth II • Queen Noor of Jordan • Yitzak Rabin • Prince Rainier III of Monaco • Charles Rangel • Dixie Lee Ray • Ronald Reagan • Nancy Reagan • Don Regan • William Rehnquist • Mary Lou Retton • Condoleeza Rice • Michael Richarda • Tom Ridge • Richard Riordan • Elliot Rirchardson • John Roberts • Brooks Robinson • Nelson Rockefeller • David Rockerfeller • Hillary Rodham Clinton • Ginger Rogers • George Romney • Mitt Romney • Linda Ronstadt • Alice Roosevelt • Joe Rosenthal • Diana Ross • Karl Rove • Marco Rubio • Donald Rumsfeld • Meg Ryan • Nolan RyanPaul Ryan • Anwar Sadat • Khieu Samphan • Bernie Sanders • Susan Sarandon • Paul Sarbanes • Ekias Sarkis • Diane Sawyer • Antonin Scalia • James Schlesinger • Helmut Schmidt • Arnold Schwarzenegger • David Schwimmer • Brent Scowcroft • Tom Seaver • Jerry Seinfeld • Ravi Shankar • Ariel Sharon • Al Sharpton • Cybill Shepherd • Eduard Shevardnadze • Eunice Shriver • Maria Shriver • Julius Shulman • George ShultzNeil Simon • William Simon • O.J. Simpson • Frank Sinatra • John Sirica • Jean Kennedy Smith • Tom & Dick Smothers • David Souter • Giovanni Spadolini • Steven Spielberg • Kenneth Starr • James Stavridis • John Paul Stevens • Potter Stewart • Igor Stravinsky • Suharto • John Sununu • Kakuei Tanaka • Elizabeth Taylor • George Tenet • Margaret Thatcher • The Rolling Stones • The Supremes • Nguyen Van Thieu • Clarence Thomas • Fred Thompson • Strom Thurmond • Josip Broz Tito • Jeffrey Toobin • John Tower • Pierre Elliott Trudeau • Donald Trump • Stansfield Turner • Johnny Unitas • Cyrus Vance • Ben Vereen • John Vessey • Antonio Villaraigosa • Paul Volcker • Kurt Waldheim • Vernon Walters • James Webb • William Webster • Casper Weinberger • William Weld • Paul Wellstone • William Westmoreland • Byron White • Christine Todd Whitman • Ron Widen • Gahan Wilson • Harold Wilson • Natalie Wood • James Woolsey • Herman Wouk • Deng Xiaoping • Lee Kwan Yew • Jiang Zemin • Jiang Zimen • Zhou Ziyang

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Photos are fragile – almost as fragile as memories. However, familiar dangers such as loss or damage to the physical negative are, in reality, the least ominous of the threats to current photo archives.

Too often archivists are handed collections after the creator has died, and with them much of the contextual information that adds immeasurable historic value to understanding the importance of the material. The foresight in tackling this archival project while David is still a working journalist means that not only will his images be preserved, but along with them the critical contextual information about them, and the stories behind the lens. In the age of the Internet we are able to share vast quantities of images in the blink of an eye, however without metadata, the true import of those images is often lost to history.

WHY NOW?

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Over the last two decades David and his wife, Rebecca, have invested their time and resources into David’s extraordinary collection with the clear objective of trying to ensure that it realizes its educational potential. Working as detectives, they tracked down Kennerly’s original photographic material from agencies and publications around the world. This material now lives with them in their home. They have invested more than $250,000 to research and deploy best practices to organize the various types of material, invest in software and personnel to protect and upgrade digital files, keeping early digital files usable and stable, create custom digital databases, edit slides and negatives to identify key images, create, process and catalogue thousands of digital files from original negatives. They are now embarking on the next step to help this collection become a living archive available to the public.

ARCHIVE CREATION

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Photo collections are complicated and expensive with each object or image requiring extensive handling before becoming a true living archive available to the public. The next most important step for the collection is to partner with an established institutional home that shares Kennerly’s objective of making his documentary images available to the public for research and education. Several major institutions and universities have expressed an interesting in acquiring some or all of the Kennerly collection. However, just as the Kennerlys have been so careful to protect and process the collection to maximize its educational potential, so too must they be careful to ensure that the collection finds its way to a home that shares that mission. The next step for the collection is to create a comprehensive inventory and assessment of its contents. This will help provide a foundation for formal discussions around acquisition and providing access to the public.

CREATING A LIVING ARCHIVE

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Once installed in its new institutional home or homes, the Kennerly collection will continue its journey to become a true living archive. A three to five-year endowment will provide the infrastructure and resources to transform the collection into a fully accessible, annotated and dynamic archive. Images would be edited, with key collections selected for full-scale annotation and then catalogued into a searchable database that is made available to the public for research and enjoyment. Physical materials such as letters, prints and rare objects collected throughout Kennerly’s 50-year career would be digitized, annotated and also catalogued so that a digital link could be made between these objects and their corresponding photographic images. Audio and/or video recordings would be created of Kennerly relaying his personal recollections about the events that he documented. As archive components are created, additional educational opportunities will become possible such exhibitions, videos, and lecture series with Kennerly interviewing subjects of his images about the world events that he documented with his photos.

CREATING A LIVING ARCHIVE STEPS - PT. 1

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Here is a snapshot of the many steps involved in creating a living archive.

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CREATING A LIVING ARCHIVE STEPS - PT. 2

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in multiple locations.

[CURRENTLY FUNDRAISING FOR THIS PHASE] In order to formally consider acquiring the collection, institutions have asked for an INVENTORY & ASSESSMENT of its contents. Information gathered from this process will enable a future home for the collection to assess its ability to accept a collection of this size and what will be needed to further process its material through each stage of becoming a living archive. With more than a million objects and images, this process will require a small staff, larger work space and professional expertise. This step is often done in collaboration with an institution that has interest in acquiring the collection to ensure that all questions, from the scope of the collection’s contents to mechanics of acquisition are addressed and resolved.

NEXT STEPS - INVENTORY & ASSESSMENT

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HOW YOU CAN HELP

Kennerly has created two limited edition portfolios to help support his effort to secure a home for this collection where it can shed light on fifty years of history for future generations of learners.

Each portfolio is presented in an archival handcrafted box that also contains a special description of the portfolio that is written by Kennerly. The portfolio title and photographer’s signature is embossed on the front of each box. Photographs are printed on archival double weight Hahnemuhle paper and personally signed and numbered on the front and the back by Kennerly. In addition, each print has its edition number, name of the portfolio, and description of the individual image laser-printed on the back.

Portfolios are available for $20,000. 100% of the proceeds received from the purchase of these portfolios will be used to advance the Archive Project. Choose one or both portfolios to help ensure that this extraordinary collection fulfils its educational mission for generations to come.

HELP MAKE HISTORY

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THE PULITZER PORTFOLIO

Never before published together or offered as a complete set of fine art prints, this limited edition portfolio includes the eleven photos created by David Hume Kennerly throughout 1971 that comprised his 1972 Pulitzer-Prize winning portfolio. For decades, Kennerly was unable to access the negatives for all of these images. In fact, he didn’t learn until after a trip to the Columbia University campus in the 1980s, exactly which images were in the submission. This portfolio is contains eleven 16”x20” prints in an edition of fifty and also includes Kennerly’s, “A Pulitzer Story,” his personal Pulitzer recollections and observations.

THE ARCHIVE PORTFOLIO

Twenty-five 11”x14” archival prints in an edition of twenty-five. Half of these prints are among his most familiar and actively collected: Five Presidents at the Nixon Library dedication, behind-the-scenes in Austin on election night 2000, Betty Ford on the Cabinet Room table, the proof sheet of Nixon’s farewell, and an intimate moment with the Obamas on Inauguration Night 2009. The other half of the portfolio are prints that were recently rediscovered or retrieved as a result of work done on this project, including Hillary Clinton dwarfed by the shadow of her husband shortly after his admission of impropriety, the Coconut Monk in Vietnam, life-sized potatoes in Driggs, Idaho, and geese reflected in the Vietnam memorial in Washington DC.

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DAVID HUME KENNERLY 818.292.0989 [email protected]

REBECCA SOLADAY KENNERLY 310.453.8481 [email protected]

Kennerly.com

CONTACT