Brenda ann kenneally wiki
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PhotoIreland Festival
2019.photoireland.org
Events
Photobook Launch:Sarah Pannell, Tabriz to Shiraz, 23 May
Documenting the Everyday, with Sarah Pannell, The Library planerat arbete , 24 May
Photography for Non-Human Entities, with Alan Butler, The Library planerat arbete , 4, 11, 19 and 25 May
Reading Photographs: An Introduction, with Michelle Dunn Marsh, Temple Bar galleri + Studios, Studio 12, 5-9 Temple Bar, Dublin 2, 28 May
Visualising Power, with Lewis Bush, The Library Project, 7 June
Open Source Research Methods, with Lewis Bush, The Library Project, 8 June
Blow Photo, Fuse, The Museum of Contemporary Photography of Ireland, huvudstaden i irland, 13 July
How to be an Ethically Literate Photographer, with The Photography Ethics Centre, The Museum of Contemporary Photography of Ireland, 14 July
Performing the Posthuman Subject in Photography, The Museum of Contemporary Photography of Ireland, 13 July
Anita Groener and Owen Boss In Conversation, The Museum of Contemporary Photography of Ireland, 25 Ju
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Brenda Ann Kenneally
Brenda Ann Kenneally est une photojournaliste et photographe documentaire américaine née en 1959 à Albany, dans l’État de New York.
Elle est connue pour son travail de documentation dem la pauvreté aux États-Unis[1]. Elle est lauréate du prix Canon de la femme photojournaliste et du prix World Press Photo[2].
Biographie
[modifier | modifier le code]Jeunesse et études
[modifier | modifier le code]Brenda Ann Kenneally est née le 23 octobre 1959 à Albany dans l’État de New York. Elle a grandi dans la ville voisine de Troy, berceau de la révolution industrielle aux États-Unis mais en grandes difficultés dans les années 1960 et 1970. Ses parents divorcent alors qu’elle est encore enfant. Son père, bipolaire enchaîne fransk artikel dépressions et sa mère titta voit diagnostiquer une sclérose ett plaques vers trente ans[3].
Brenda Ann Kenneally tente un nouveau départ en 1975 et quitte Troy pour la Floride. Elle arrête de se droguer et de boire et entre au collè
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Brenda Ann Kenneally
American photojournalist and documentary photographer
Brenda Ann Kenneally (born October 23, 1959)[1] is an American photojournalist and documentary photographer, specializing in social causes and the illegal drug economy. Her work has been featured in the NYT Magazine, Rolling Stone, and Ms. She won the 2000 Community Awareness Award from the National Press Photographer's Association, and the 2001 International Prize for Photojournalism.[2] Kenneally is the founder of A Little Creative Class, a non-profit art organization that works to address the obstacles that deter poor and low-income youth from participation in art and the emerging idea-based economy.[3]
Early life
[edit]Kenneally was born in Albany, New York in the late 1950s, [4] and grew up nearby Troy, New York. Her parents divorced eight years into their marriage.[5] She then moved back in with her mother, and Kenneally's grandmother. Kenneall