Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Nederlands: Postuum officieel portret van de op 22 november 1963 vermoorde Amerikaanse president John F. Kennedy Português : Retrato presidencial oficial póstumo do presidente dos Estados Unidos, John F. Kennedy , criado em 1970 pelo pintor Aaron Shikler .
President John F. Kennedy's official portrait was painted posthumously by Aaron Shikler at the request of Jacqueline Kennedy in 1970. It is generally analyzed as a character study. Unlike most presidential portraits, Kennedy's depicts the president as pensive, with eyes downcast and arms folded.
The Kennedy brothers: Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy, Senator Ted Kennedy, and President John F. Kennedy in 1963. The Kennedy family is one of the most established political families in the United States, having produced a president, three senators, three ambassadors, and multiple other representatives and politicians.
President John F. Kennedy and wife Jackie, surrounded by a crowd and followed by bodyguard Clint Hill and Vice President Lyndon Johnson, enter Hotel Texas in downtown Fort Worth on Nov. 21, 1963.
The Making of the President 1960 (1963; based on the book) John F. Kennedy: Years of Lightning, Day of Drums (1964) American Presidents: Life Portraits (1999 series) Roots of the Cuban Missile Crisis (2001) The Search for Kennedy's PT 109 (2002) Bobby Kennedy for President (2018 series)
On November 22, 1963, President John F. Kennedy was seated beside his smartly dressed wife, who was wearing a pink Chanel-like suit and matching pillbox hat and holding an armful of red roses that ...
The Green Room became President John F. Kennedy's favorite. [4] After Kennedy's assassination, the Kennedy family donated Claude Monet's 1897 Morning on the Seine, Good Weather, to the White House. It was hung in the Green Room. When Aaron Shikler finished President Kennedy's official portrait in 1970, it, too, was hung in the Green Room. [20]
The Yellow Oval Room during the administration of President John F. Kennedy, as decorated by Sister Parish and Stéphane Boudin. The earliest written description of the room dates to the John Adams administration, and describes the room as a ladies drawing room. The room was papered in yellow with gilded stars, and a suite of crimson furniture.