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Photography, Black & White on Paper
Size: 13 W x 9 H x 0.1 D in
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A great anti-war demonstration in NYC against the 1971 Nixon administration invasion of Cambodia and the war in Vietnam started out on Park Avenue, where Diana Mara Henry captured a street theater figure carrying a photo of the My Lai massacre, and the words" And babies? And babies." The print was made by Diana Mara Henry in her NYC darkroom.
1973
Black & White on Paper
One-of-a-kind Artwork
13 W x 9 H x 0.1 D in
Not Framed
No
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"Your photos are beautiful and represent such a powerful and passionate time in American History. I believe these photos will last and many years from now they will be looked at and studied just as Matthew Brady's classic and haunting Civil War photos are today..."- Ron Kovic tribute for Diana Mara Henry. Diana Mara Henry began her career as a photo editor and reporter for the Harvard Crimson, 1967-1969. After college she was a researcher for NBC news and a General Assignment Reporter for the Staten Island Advance. Going freelance in 1971, she photographed George McGovern -from the New Hampshire primaries to the National Democratic Convention, Bella Abzug and Elizabeth Holtzman. The most-published photographs of her career came as official photographer for the National Commission on International Women's Year to document the First National Women's Conference in Houston, TX, 1977. Other extended reports include Vietnam Veterans, 1970-1981; election night in Plains, Georgia, 1976; Women Office Workers/Nine-to-Five, 1979; the Women's Pentagon Action, 1980; One-Room Schools and Schoolteachers of Vermont (shown at the Brattleboro Museum in 1984) and One-Room Schools of Ulster County, NY, and the Natzweiler-Struthof Concentration Camp, Alsace, France. Grants from the NY State Council on the Arts, the NY Foundation for the Arts, and the Ms Foundation for Women have supported her projects. She is a resident of Newport, VT and has found there her Shangri-la.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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