Photojournalists often make decisions instantly and the resulting photograph can become the powerful and memorable record of a moment—or a movement. Moneta Sleet, Jr., born in Owensboro, Kentucky, in 1926, received his first camera at the age of nine. This retrospective collection of more than 100 photographs, drawn largely from images Sleet shot for Johnson Publishing, divides his work into six sections: The era of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.; the Civil Rights Movement; Africa; Photo Essays; Portraits; and Children. It was Sleet's gripping picture of Coretta Scott King and her youngest daughter, Bernice, at Dr. King's funeral that earned him the Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography in 1969—the first African American to be so honored. The photographs of Moneta Sleet Jr. remain models of excellence.
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A Century of The New Yorker
February 22, 2025–February 21, 2026Stephen A. Schwarzman BuildingThis exhibition will survey 100 years of life at The New Yorker, bringing to life the people, stories, and ideas…