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Photojournalist Eddie Adams exhibit in art gallery through August

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Eddie Adams
Photojournalist Eddie Adams arrives in Vietnam in 1965, the first of three tours for the world-renown photographer.

 

Pulitzer Prize- winning war photographer and New Kensington native

UPPER BURRELL, Pa. – “Saigon Execution,” the world-famous photograph that helped turn American opinion against the Vietnam War, is one of the many works of the late photojournalist Eddie Adams that will be on display May 8, and continuing throughout the summer in the Penn State New Kensington Art Gallery.

The exhibit, “Eddie Adams: Vietnam,” features more than 50 photographs from the Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer’s collection. A reception is scheduled from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m., Saturday, May 28, in the art gallery. Eddie’s widow, Alyssa Adams, will be on hand to talk about her late husband. Walter Anderson, retired CEO of Parade magazine, is the special guest speaker. Anderson worked with Adams for many years. The exhibit and reception are free to the public. The gallery is open daily from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. weekdays and noon to 5 p.m. weekends.

In a more than 50-year career as a working photographer, Adams covered 13 wars, from Korea to Vietnam to Kuwait. In Korea, he was in the Marine Corps as a combat photographer. During Vietnam, he did three tours working for The Associated Press.

He won the 1969 Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography for a shot of a Vietnamese general executing a Viet Cong prisoner on the second day of the Tet Offensive. The 35mm photo was instrumental to the rise of protest demonstrations against the war.

The photograph was not a favorite of Adams because it did not tell the whole story. General Nguyen Ngoc Loan was reacting to the prisoner’s complicity in the recent murders of Loan’s aide and American soldiers. Adams was disturbed by the anti-war movement usurping his work.

Saigon Execution Boat of No Smiles
"Saigon Execution" and "Boat of No Smiles" were famous shots of working photographer Eddie Adams.

The Adams photograph that was a favorite and affected change in America was a part of his 1979 series about people of Vietnam fleeing their homeland. “Boat of No Smiles” featured about 48 men, women and children on a 30-foot fishing boat in the Gulf of Siam headed for Thailand. The boat reached its destination but was turned away and towed back out to sea by the Thailand military. The photo shows a Vietnamese women aboard a refugee boat using a blanket to shelter herself and her child from the hot sun. Adams’ depiction of the “boat people” prompted President Jimmy Carter and Congress to allow more than 200,000 Vietnamese refugees into the United States.

In addition to his combat work, Adams photographed numerous presidents, world leaders and celebrities. He worked for Parade for 12 years as a special correspondent, and his work appeared on the cover of the magazine over 350 times.

A New Kensington native, Adams died in 2004 in New York City from amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, at the age of 71.

The four-month exhibit runs until Aug. 27. The photographs are powerful and may elicit strong emotions in viewers. Parents are advised to tour the exhibit before deciding if it is appropriate for their children.

Prior to the coming to New Kensington, the traveling show was featured in the Dublin Art Council in Ohio. The collection is permanently housed at the Dolph Briscoe Center for American History at the University of Texas at Austin. Alyssa donated the photographic archive, which includes slides, negatives, prints, audio and video materials, news stories, diaries, notes and tear sheets.

For more information about the exhibit and reception, call 724-334-6056.

News Contact: Bill Woodard
Alumni and Public Relations
724-334-6049, uxw1@psu.edu

 


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