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David Hume Kennerly (born March 9, 1947) is an American photographer. He won the 1972 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography for his portfolio of photographs of the Vietnam War, Cambodia, East Pakistani refugees near Calcutta, and the Ali-Frazier fight in Madison Square Garden. [1]
Jan 16, 2020 · The Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist David Kennerly talks about the importance of bravery, access to power, and paying it forward to the next generation of photographers and students.
David Hume Kennerly has been a photographer on the front lines of history for more than fifty years. At 25 he was one of the youngest winners of the Pulitzer Prize in Journalism. Kennerly’s 1972 award for Feature Photography included images of the Vietnam and Cambodia wars, refugees escaping from East Pakistan into India, and the Ali v.
- David Hume Kennerly, Pulitzer Winner
- Negatives Gone Forever
- Wars and Presidents
- Official Presidential Photographer
- A Singular Career
It was 1972. The Vietnam War was raging on in Southeast Asia. American soldiers were fighting, being wounded and dying. David Hume Kennerly, a 24-year-old photojournalist covering the conflict, recalls how he learned he had earned the Pulitzer Prize. Kennerly went on to explain his disbelief: Then the wire machine broke down. It wasn’t possible in ...
Kennerly’s negatives were housed in the files of the United Press International. Kennerly explains how these valuable images were stored. “A common practice at UPI was to cut the strip of 36 black and white negatives into sections of three frames each, usually keeping the selected image in the middle with a photo on each side,” he said. “That was d...
David Hume Kennerly has photographed 8 wars and seven presidents during his 40 plus years as a photojournalist. His assignments have taken him to 140 countries. He has contributed to Time, Newsweek, Life, George (John F. Kennedy, Jr.’s political magazine) and published several books. “Shooter”is his most well known book, in which Kennerly documents...
Richard Nixon resigned the presidency of the United States on August 9, 1974. Gerald Ford became the 38th President. David Hume Kennerly was Fords official photographer during the two and a half years of his time in office. Kennerly had extraordinary access to the president and every aspect of the administration. Two of the opening photographs — bo...
Kennerly describes more of his work in this 3-minute Canon Explorer of Light video. Sources: David Hume Kennerly Pulitzer Story, Getty Images, More inspirational photographers are in On Photography.
- Kevin Ames
For over fifty years, photojournalist David Hume Kennerly has provided an intimate view of politics and world events. At age 25 he became one of the youngest winners of the Pulitzer Prize in Journalism.
Sep 16, 2020 · David Hume Kennerly has photographed some of the biggest historical events of the last fifty years and some of the smallest. The committee that awarded Kennerly the Pulitzer Prize in Journalism for Feature
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Feb 1, 2010 · David Hume Kennerly has led an amazing career as a photojournalist. In 1968 he photographed Robert Kennedy at the California presidential primary moments before he was gunned down at the Ambassador Hotel.