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DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220215T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220215T190000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20220208T170543Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220208T170543Z
UID:4385-1644944400-1644951600@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Women Photojournalists of Washington Reception and Lecture
DESCRIPTION:You are invited Tuesday\, February 15th for the opening reception and a SONY sponsored lecture with Stefani Reynolds at 5:00 PM JRH Gallery and auditorium. Reynolds is a photojournalist and documentary photographer based in Washington D.C. A graduate of Pratt Institute\, her work seeks to address prominent issues within the American landscape\, including poverty\, homelessness\, and gentrification. \nThe lecture will mark the opening of the Women Photojournalists of Washington (WPOW) 15th Annual Juried Exhibition\, which features standout photography and multimedia pieces by members of WPOW from the past year. Photography and videos related to the year’s events from 24 member photographers and videographers\, including Pro and Student Best in Show winners Sarah Silbiger and Yijo Shen\, are included. We hope to see you there! \n \nWHO? \nWomen Photojournalists of Washington exhibition opening with featured guest\, Stefani Reynolds \nWHEN? \nTuesday\, Feb 15 \n5:00 – gallery doors open \n5:30 – exhibition remarks \n6:00 – lecture/presentation in JRH auditorium \nWHERE? \nJody Richards Hall on the campus of WKU \n  \nFree and open to all\, light refreshments will be served courtesy of the School of Media. Contact Tim Broekema (tim.broekema@wku.edu) if you have any questions \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/women-photojournalists-of-washington-reception-and-lecture-2/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture,JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220215T170000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220215T190000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20220208T170543Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220208T170543Z
UID:3985-1644944400-1644951600@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Women Photojournalists of Washington Reception and Lecture
DESCRIPTION:You are invited Tuesday\, February 15th for the opening reception and a SONY sponsored lecture with Stefani Reynolds at 5:00 PM JRH Gallery and auditorium. Reynolds is a photojournalist and documentary photographer based in Washington D.C. A graduate of Pratt Institute\, her work seeks to address prominent issues within the American landscape\, including poverty\, homelessness\, and gentrification. \nThe lecture will mark the opening of the Women Photojournalists of Washington (WPOW) 15th Annual Juried Exhibition\, which features standout photography and multimedia pieces by members of WPOW from the past year. Photography and videos related to the year’s events from 24 member photographers and videographers\, including Pro and Student Best in Show winners Sarah Silbiger and Yijo Shen\, are included. We hope to see you there! \n \nWHO? \nWomen Photojournalists of Washington exhibition opening with featured guest\, Stefani Reynolds \nWHEN? \nTuesday\, Feb 15 \n5:00 – gallery doors open \n5:30 – exhibition remarks \n6:00 – lecture/presentation in JRH auditorium \nWHERE? \nJody Richards Hall on the campus of WKU \n  \nFree and open to all\, light refreshments will be served courtesy of the School of Media. Contact Tim Broekema (tim.broekema@wku.edu) if you have any questions \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/women-photojournalists-of-washington-reception-and-lecture/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture,JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220912
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20221105
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20220909T190734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220909T190946Z
UID:4020-1662940800-1667606399@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:SLICES: A Look Back At The Way We Were
DESCRIPTION:From the archives of the Louisville Courier-Journal\, this collection of 57 images that span six decades\, document the seemingly mundane to significant events of our collective past. The Courier-Journal staff created a record of history that became immortalized in the power of photography. As time marches forward\, these images freeze a layer of humanity in the click of a shutter revealing to us how much we have changed\, and just perhaps\, how we have not. \nGALLERY HOURS: \nM-W: 9:00 am – 9:00 pm \nTH-F: 9:00 am – 4:00 pm \n  \nThe 57 images on display as well as many more can be seen in a book published by Press Syndication Group and can be purchased here. \n\nReaders of the Courier Journal picked up their newspapers on January 5\, 1896\, and found something they had never seen before. There\, splashed across the front of the third section of the newspapers\, were photographs – not the lithographs they had come to expect in their paper – honest-to-God\, half-tone photos of state-owned buildings around the commonwealth. \nThat was nine months before the New York Times began running photographs in the pages of its Sunday Magazine and years before either newspaper would put photos on their front pages. Before that\, newspapers generally used hand-engraved lithographic prints to illustrate their stories\, but the advent of the half-tone printing process\, for the first time\, began to bring the staid old publications with long columns of gray type to life. It was that page that ushered in a new era for the Courier Journal. \nThe story that accompanied the Courier Journal’s picture package that Sunday morning\, buried at the bottom of the page\, was almost certainly included as nothing more than a vehicle to show off the Courier Journal’s new technology – the process of using tiny dots to reproduce photos – that allowed it to bring stories to its readers like never before. The photos hinted at what the Courier Journal would become\, with its corps of photographers crisscrossing the state to bring the stories of Kentucky back to its readers in a way writers never could It started with static photos of buildings\, nature and mug shots of people that appeared in the third section of the paper – later called the “Half-tone Section” because of its heavy reliance on photos. \nAs the ability to print photographs faster and with better clarity advanced\, so did photography. In years that followed\, cameras went from using glass plates\, to George Eastman’s roll film that first allowed for photography without a tripod\, to finally in 1925\, the invention of the 35mm camera. The newspaper eventually introduced color photographs to its Sunday magazine and then in the early 1990s to the newspaper itself. \nIn the early years\, the newspaper’s photography staff wasn’t much to speak of. When reporter William Burke “Skeets” Miller won the Pulitzer Prize for reporting in 1925 after he crawled into Sand Cave in Southern Kentucky to interview trapped cave explorer Floyd Collins\,he – and not a photographer – was given a camera to take the photos inside the cave. Over the years\, though\, the newspaper developed a dedicated photo staff that served both the morning Courier Journal and its sister publication\, the afternoon Louisville Times. And with the evolution of cameras came the evolution of the Courier Journal’s great team of photographers. By the mid-1980s that staff had grown to more than 30 photographers\, editors and laboratory technicians who were largely based in Louisville but who traveled to all corners of the state and beyond at a moment’s notice to cover everything from political campaigns to mine disasters to floods to life. \nFor more than 30 years\, the staff was led by Billy Davis\, the longtime director of photography who was most known for his aerial photography – shot from a series of six airplanes that the Courier Journal owned between 1953 and the mid-1990s\, according to C. Thomas Hardin\, who succeeded Al Allen in leading the photo staff. \nIt was in 1953 that Davis\, an accomplished pilot who first photographed Louisville from the sky during the 1937 Ohio River flood when he was working for the Chattanooga News\, convinced Courier Journal President Barry Bingham Sr.\, Publisher Mark Ethridge and Vice President Lisle Baker that the photo staff needed an airplane to travel the state and get shots from high above. \n“We could get anywhere in the state in less than an hour and a half” former director of photography Hardin said. “It was our bureau in the sky” \nThrough the 1970s and 1980s\, the Courier Journal photography staff either won or helped win three Pulitzer Prizes for the newspaper. The first came in 1976 when it won the award for feature photography for its coverage of forced busing and the integration of Jefferson County’s public schools. The next came four years later when reporter Joel Brinkley and photographer Jay Mather teamed up to win the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting for their stories and images of the refugee crisis unfolding in Cambodia because of the brutal rule of the Khmer Rouge. \nAnd then in 1989\, the photography staff shared a Pulitzer Prize with the newspaper’s reporting and editing staffs for their coverage of the Carroll County bus crash. The accident\, among the worst in U.S. history\, killed 27 people and injured 34 others when drunken driver Larry Mahoney plowed his pickup truck into an old school bus owned by the Radcliff Assembly of God Church that was returning from a youth group trip to Kings Island amusement Park near Cincinnati. \nThe photographs they and other Courier Journal photographers shot over the years both lift your spirit and break your heart. They tell stories of life and death. They teach us about the famous and the unknown. The extraordinary and the mundane. Many are beautiful in their simplicity\, brilliant in their complexity\, and they’re all\, frankly\, just wonderful to look at. \nA book like this wouldn’t be complete without Stewart Bowman’s scene-setting photos of the Bluegrass region with the horses and barns and fences and all their iconic beauty. Nor would it seem right to publish this work without Davis aerial shot of the North Fork of the Kentucky River enveloping the city of Hazard and a smaller nearby community during the floods of 1963. \nThere are photos of young\, thin\, beautiful Elvis. And there’s an older\, jump-suit-wearing Elvis in his decline. Baryshnikov and Beach Boys. Mick Jagger and Elton John. And James Brown. Bill Monroe. Aretha \nThere is history – like Charles Lindbergh\, his darkened face visible in the cockpit of the Spirit of St. Louis parked on the tarmac at Louisville’s Bowman Field. And presidents from Franklin Roosevelt through Donald J. Trump. \nSome of the photos are shot in a brief window while others show the incredible access granted the photographers and the painstaking hours of sitting\, waiting\, for the perfect shot. The perfect moment. \nSadly\, many earlier photos you won’t see here were destroyed in the 1937 flood. Still many of the older negatives that survived the flood or were shot in the years shortly after are blistering and lost to time. But so many of the photos live on. And they tell stories. Our stories. The stories of our fathers and mothers. And their fathers and mothers. \nWhether it’s a car with its rear end hanging from a chain and a mechanic poised with a steam gun to clean it after a flood\, whether it’s people from a protestant church handling snakes in rural Kentucky or the body of a man who leaped to his death from a building in downtown Louisville\, the photos do the job that words alone can’t do. \nThere’s a soldier mourning over a flag-draped coffin in one photo and a soldier – pint of Seagram’s whisky in hand – laying a big celebratory smooch on a woman in another. \nSome of the most striking photos\, however\, are the ones that simply tell a story of everyday life\, ones that don’t focus on big\, important events or big\, important people. They are the ones that don’t complement a story but tell a story all their own. A master of that was Pam Spaulding\, who began photographing a young lawyer and his family for a newspaper project in 1977 and continues to photograph the family to this day. The images she made of the McGarvey family – including one with the mother lecturing one son and holding another while the family dog is on the exam table in the veterinarian’s office – could be a scene from any of our lives. \nIt was the result of painstaking work and hours upon hours of sitting and waiting\, and it’s a project like none other in the history of photojournalism \n“I used to tell photographers\, ‘Don’t go in and feel like you have to entertain. Go in\, be nice and be boring\,” Hardin said. \nBill Luster’s fabulous shot of grannies – both embarrassed and intrigued – at a Chippendales show at the Toy Tiger Lounge and Hardin’s photo of former Gov. A. B. “Happy” Chandler greeting a voter in the middle of a Western Kentucky street\, are both examples of photographers positioning themselves in the right place and waiting for the right time to press the shutter. Many of the photographers in these pages have gone on to work for publications known for their photographs\, like National Geographic and LIFE Magazine\, while others have spent their entire careers at the Courier Journal. And many of them continue to make incredible images that grace the pages of the Courier Journal today.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/slices-a-look-back-at-the-way-we-were/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery
CATEGORIES:JRH Gallery
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220912T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221104T235959
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20220909T190734Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220909T190734Z
UID:4387-1662940800-1667606399@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:SLICES: A Look Back At The Way We Were
DESCRIPTION:From the archives of the Louisville Courier-Journal\, this collection of 57 images that span six decades\, document the seemingly mundane to significant events of our collective past. The Courier-Journal staff created a record of history that became immortalized in the power of photography. As time marches forward\, these images freeze a layer of humanity in the click of a shutter revealing to us how much we have changed\, and just perhaps\, how we have not. \nGALLERY HOURS: \nM-W: 9:00 am – 9:00 pm \nTH-F: 9:00 am – 4:00 pm \n  \nThe 57 images on display as well as many more can be seen in a book published by Press Syndication Group and can be purchased here. \n\nReaders of the Courier Journal picked up their newspapers on January 5\, 1896\, and found something they had never seen before. There\, splashed across the front of the third section of the newspapers\, were photographs – not the lithographs they had come to expect in their paper – honest-to-God\, half-tone photos of state-owned buildings around the commonwealth. \nThat was nine months before the New York Times began running photographs in the pages of its Sunday Magazine and years before either newspaper would put photos on their front pages. Before that\, newspapers generally used hand-engraved lithographic prints to illustrate their stories\, but the advent of the half-tone printing process\, for the first time\, began to bring the staid old publications with long columns of gray type to life. It was that page that ushered in a new era for the Courier Journal. \nThe story that accompanied the Courier Journal\’s picture package that Sunday morning\, buried at the bottom of the page\, was almost certainly included as nothing more than a vehicle to show off the Courier Journal\’s new technology – the process of using tiny dots to reproduce photos – that allowed it to bring stories to its readers like never before. The photos hinted at what the Courier Journal would become\, with its corps of photographers crisscrossing the state to bring the stories of Kentucky back to its readers in a way writers never could It started with static photos of buildings\, nature and mug shots of people that appeared in the third section of the paper – later called the \”Half-tone Section\” because of its heavy reliance on photos. \nAs the ability to print photographs faster and with better clarity advanced\, so did photography. In years that followed\, cameras went from using glass plates\, to George Eastman\’s roll film that first allowed for photography without a tripod\, to finally in 1925\, the invention of the 35mm camera. The newspaper eventually introduced color photographs to its Sunday magazine and then in the early 1990s to the newspaper itself. \nIn the early years\, the newspaper\’s photography staff wasn\’t much to speak of. When reporter William Burke \”Skeets\” Miller won the Pulitzer Prize for reporting in 1925 after he crawled into Sand Cave in Southern Kentucky to interview trapped cave explorer Floyd Collins\,he – and not a photographer – was given a camera to take the photos inside the cave. Over the years\, though\, the newspaper developed a dedicated photo staff that served both the morning Courier Journal and its sister publication\, the afternoon Louisville Times. And with the evolution of cameras came the evolution of the Courier Journal\’s great team of photographers. By the mid-1980s that staff had grown to more than 30 photographers\, editors and laboratory technicians who were largely based in Louisville but who traveled to all corners of the state and beyond at a moment\’s notice to cover everything from political campaigns to mine disasters to floods to life. \nFor more than 30 years\, the staff was led by Billy Davis\, the longtime director of photography who was most known for his aerial photography – shot from a series of six airplanes that the Courier Journal owned between 1953 and the mid-1990s\, according to C. Thomas Hardin\, who succeeded Al Allen in leading the photo staff. \nIt was in 1953 that Davis\, an accomplished pilot who first photographed Louisville from the sky during the 1937 Ohio River flood when he was working for the Chattanooga News\, convinced Courier Journal President Barry Bingham Sr.\, Publisher Mark Ethridge and Vice President Lisle Baker that the photo staff needed an airplane to travel the state and get shots from high above. \n\”We could get anywhere in the state in less than an hour and a half\” former director of photography Hardin said. \”It was our bureau in the sky\” \nThrough the 1970s and 1980s\, the Courier Journal photography staff either won or helped win three Pulitzer Prizes for the newspaper. The first came in 1976 when it won the award for feature photography for its coverage of forced busing and the integration of Jefferson County\’s public schools. The next came four years later when reporter Joel Brinkley and photographer Jay Mather teamed up to win the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting for their stories and images of the refugee crisis unfolding in Cambodia because of the brutal rule of the Khmer Rouge. \nAnd then in 1989\, the photography staff shared a Pulitzer Prize with the newspaper\’s reporting and editing staffs for their coverage of the Carroll County bus crash. The accident\, among the worst in U.S. history\, killed 27 people and injured 34 others when drunken driver Larry Mahoney plowed his pickup truck into an old school bus owned by the Radcliff Assembly of God Church that was returning from a youth group trip to Kings Island amusement Park near Cincinnati. \nThe photographs they and other Courier Journal photographers shot over the years both lift your spirit and break your heart. They tell stories of life and death. They teach us about the famous and the unknown. The extraordinary and the mundane. Many are beautiful in their simplicity\, brilliant in their complexity\, and they\’re all\, frankly\, just wonderful to look at. \nA book like this wouldn\’t be complete without Stewart Bowman\’s scene-setting photos of the Bluegrass region with the horses and barns and fences and all their iconic beauty. Nor would it seem right to publish this work without Davis aerial shot of the North Fork of the Kentucky River enveloping the city of Hazard and a smaller nearby community during the floods of 1963. \nThere are photos of young\, thin\, beautiful Elvis. And there\’s an older\, jump-suit-wearing Elvis in his decline. Baryshnikov and Beach Boys. Mick Jagger and Elton John. And James Brown. Bill Monroe. Aretha \nThere is history – like Charles Lindbergh\, his darkened face visible in the cockpit of the Spirit of St. Louis parked on the tarmac at Louisville\’s Bowman Field. And presidents from Franklin Roosevelt through Donald J. Trump. \nSome of the photos are shot in a brief window while others show the incredible access granted the photographers and the painstaking hours of sitting\, waiting\, for the perfect shot. The perfect moment. \nSadly\, many earlier photos you won\’t see here were destroyed in the 1937 flood. Still many of the older negatives that survived the flood or were shot in the years shortly after are blistering and lost to time. But so many of the photos live on. And they tell stories. Our stories. The stories of our fathers and mothers. And their fathers and mothers. \nWhether it\’s a car with its rear end hanging from a chain and a mechanic poised with a steam gun to clean it after a flood\, whether it\’s people from a protestant church handling snakes in rural Kentucky or the body of a man who leaped to his death from a building in downtown Louisville\, the photos do the job that words alone can\’t do. \nThere\’s a soldier mourning over a flag-draped coffin in one photo and a soldier – pint of Seagram\’s whisky in hand – laying a big celebratory smooch on a woman in another. \nSome of the most striking photos\, however\, are the ones that simply tell a story of everyday life\, ones that don\’t focus on big\, important events or big\, important people. They are the ones that don\’t complement a story but tell a story all their own. A master of that was Pam Spaulding\, who began photographing a young lawyer and his family for a newspaper project in 1977 and continues to photograph the family to this day. The images she made of the McGarvey family – including one with the mother lecturing one son and holding another while the family dog is on the exam table in the veterinarian\’s office – could be a scene from any of our lives. \nIt was the result of painstaking work and hours upon hours of sitting and waiting\, and it\’s a project like none other in the history of photojournalism \n\”I used to tell photographers\, \’Don\’t go in and feel like you have to entertain. Go in\, be nice and be boring\,\” Hardin said. \nBill Luster\’s fabulous shot of grannies – both embarrassed and intrigued – at a Chippendales show at the Toy Tiger Lounge and Hardin\’s photo of former Gov. A. B. \”Happy\” Chandler greeting a voter in the middle of a Western Kentucky street\, are both examples of photographers positioning themselves in the right place and waiting for the right time to press the shutter. Many of the photographers in these pages have gone on to work for publications known for their photographs\, like National Geographic and LIFE Magazine\, while others have spent their entire careers at the Courier Journal. And many of them continue to make incredible images that grace the pages of the Courier Journal today.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/slices-a-look-back-at-the-way-we-were-2/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery
CATEGORIES:JRH Gallery
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220912T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220912T210000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20220908T174217Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220908T174217Z
UID:4386-1663009200-1663016400@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Get Ready for CPOY
DESCRIPTION:Look over work to submit for CPOY\, give feedback\, and hang out! Stop by room 127 to join.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/get-ready-for-cpoy-2/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20220912T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20220912T210000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20220908T174217Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220908T182608Z
UID:4018-1663009200-1663016400@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Get Ready for CPOY
DESCRIPTION:Look over work to submit for CPOY\, give feedback\, and hang out! Stop by room 127 to join.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/get-ready-for-cpoy/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221101T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221101T210000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20221027T014227Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221113T225034Z
UID:4034-1667329200-1667336400@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Mid-Semester Critique
DESCRIPTION:Come show 5 of your favorite photos from the semester and critique your classmate’s work! \nJRH 127
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/mid-semester-critique/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221101T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221101T210000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20221027T014227Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221027T014227Z
UID:4388-1667329200-1667336400@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Mid-Semester Critique
DESCRIPTION:Come show 5 of your favorite photos from the semester and critique your classmate\’s work! \nJRH 127
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/mid-semester-critique-2/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221114T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221114T170000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20221113T224731Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221113T225111Z
UID:4056-1668441600-1668445200@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Presentation of Fleischaker/Green Awards
DESCRIPTION:Western Kentucky University’s School of Media will present the 2022 Fleischaker/Greene Award for Courageous International Reporting on Monday (Nov. 14) to journalists covering the war in Ukraine. \nFour-time Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist Carol Guzy and Editor-in-chief Olga Rudenko and the staff of the Kyiv Independent in Ukraine have been selected as this year’s recipients of the prestigious award. The awards ceremony will begin at 4 p.m. at the Gary Ransdell Hall Auditorium. \nGuzy’s career as a photographer spans more than 40 years\, from a staff member at the Miami Herald\, to The Washington Post and currently as a contract photographer for Zuma Press. Her current work is documenting the war in Ukraine. \nRudenko and her staff of 32 journalists at the Kyiv Independent have not shied away from telling the stories of their war-torn Ukraine. \nGuzy will accept the award by Zoom from Ukraine where she continues to report for Zuma Press. It is not yet determined if Rudenko will be able to join the Zoom presentation.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/presentation-of-fleischaker-green-awards/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221114T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20221114T170000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20221113T224731Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221113T224731Z
UID:4389-1668441600-1668445200@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Presentation of Fleischaker/Green Awards
DESCRIPTION:Western Kentucky University’s School of Media will present the 2022 Fleischaker/Greene Award for Courageous International Reporting on Monday (Nov. 14) to journalists covering the war in Ukraine. \nFour-time Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist Carol Guzy and Editor-in-chief Olga Rudenko and the staff of the Kyiv Independent in Ukraine have been selected as this year’s recipients of the prestigious award. The awards ceremony will begin at 4 p.m. at the Gary Ransdell Hall Auditorium. \nGuzy’s career as a photographer spans more than 40 years\, from a staff member at the Miami Herald\, to The Washington Post and currently as a contract photographer for Zuma Press. Her current work is documenting the war in Ukraine. \nRudenko and her staff of 32 journalists at the Kyiv Independent have not shied away from telling the stories of their war-torn Ukraine. \nGuzy will accept the award by Zoom from Ukraine where she continues to report for Zuma Press. It is not yet determined if Rudenko will be able to join the Zoom presentation.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/presentation-of-fleischaker-green-awards-2/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20221118
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20230218
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20221118T172738Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221118T172953Z
UID:4062-1668729600-1676678399@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:A Community Devoted: Leitchfield\, Grayson County
DESCRIPTION:The School of Media is proud to announce the opening of the latest exhibition A Community Devoted at the Gallery in Jody Richards Hall. \nThe storied Mountain Workshops\, run by the WKU Photojournalism program\, completed its 47th year of documenting communities across the Commonwealth this past October and the participants\, faculty and staff invite you to take a few moments of your time to explore the people and places that make up Grayson County. It is said\, everyone has a story to tell\, there are 47 of them waiting for you to see. \nJRH Gallery Through February 17 \n\nM-W: 9:00 am – 9:00 pm\nTH-F: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm\nGallery is closed when WKU is closed\nFree parking available in Chestnut St. lot at the end of Regents street after 4:00 pm\n\nA Community Devoted: Leitchfield\, Grayson County\nNestled between Rough River and Nolin lakes\, Grayson County is one of Kentucky’s overlooked gems. More than 24\,000 people call it home. Many have generations-old ties to Leitchfield and the farmland around communities such as Caneyville\, Clarkson\, Big Clifty and Short Creek. But newcomers are welcome\, too. Many have pulled off the Western Kentucky Parkway and never looked back. \nIn 2022\, during one week in October\, 53 visual journalists from across the country and around the globe traveled to this small town to document the people and places that make-up this rural community just north of Mammoth Cave National Park. A small army of editors\, producers and staff\, many connected with Western Kentucky University’s School of Media\, welcomed them and assisted in honing their craft. This gallery is a representation of the work produced during that week. \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/a-community-devoted-leitchfield-grayson-county/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery
CATEGORIES:JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20221118T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230217T235959
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20221118T172738Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20221118T172738Z
UID:4390-1668729600-1676678399@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:A Community Devoted: Leitchfield\, Grayson County
DESCRIPTION:The School of Media is proud to announce the opening of the latest exhibition A Community Devoted at the Gallery in Jody Richards Hall. \nThe storied Mountain Workshops\, run by the WKU Photojournalism program\, completed its 47th year of documenting communities across the Commonwealth this past October and the participants\, faculty and staff invite you to take a few moments of your time to explore the people and places that make up Grayson County. It is said\, everyone has a story to tell\, there are 47 of them waiting for you to see. \nJRH Gallery Through February 17 \n\nM-W: 9:00 am – 9:00 pm\nTH-F: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm\nGallery is closed when WKU is closed\nFree parking available in Chestnut St. lot at the end of Regents street after 4:00 pm\n\nA Community Devoted: Leitchfield\, Grayson County\nNestled between Rough River and Nolin lakes\, Grayson County is one of Kentucky’s overlooked gems. More than 24\,000 people call it home. Many have generations-old ties to Leitchfield and the farmland around communities such as Caneyville\, Clarkson\, Big Clifty and Short Creek. But newcomers are welcome\, too. Many have pulled off the Western Kentucky Parkway and never looked back. \nIn 2022\, during one week in October\, 53 visual journalists from across the country and around the globe traveled to this small town to document the people and places that make-up this rural community just north of Mammoth Cave National Park. A small army of editors\, producers and staff\, many connected with Western Kentucky University’s School of Media\, welcomed them and assisted in honing their craft. This gallery is a representation of the work produced during that week. \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/a-community-devoted-leitchfield-grayson-county-2/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery
CATEGORIES:JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230119T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230119T210000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230116T192425Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230116T192425Z
UID:4392-1674156600-1674162000@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Spring 2023 Majors Meeting
DESCRIPTION:  \nTHURSDAY! January 19 at 7:30 PM \nJRH Room 127 \nAll Majors and minors should attend our semester meeting where we will go over so many details of this amazing upcoming semester. There is a lot going on – be present\, be engaged. It is your future! \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/spring-2023-majors-meeting-2/
LOCATION:JRH Room 127\, 1665 Normal St.\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Major's Meetings
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230119T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230119T210000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230116T192425Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230116T192802Z
UID:4077-1674156600-1674162000@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Spring 2023 Majors Meeting
DESCRIPTION:  \nTHURSDAY! January 19 at 7:30 PM \nJRH Room 127 \nAll Majors and minors should attend our semester meeting where we will go over so many details of this amazing upcoming semester. There is a lot going on – be present\, be engaged. It is your future! \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/spring-2023-majors-meeting/
LOCATION:JRH Room 127\, 1665 Normal St.\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Major's Meetings
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230125T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230125T210000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230112T022516Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230112T023540Z
UID:4073-1674675000-1674680400@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Sports Illustrated Photographer\, Simon Bruty to present his work
DESCRIPTION:Come and see images that have defined the sports world for the past three decades as photographer Simon Bruty presents work at Jody Richards Hall Auditorium Wednesday\, January 25 at 7:30 PM in his event sponsored by Canon USA. We request that you register for this FREE event here. \nDuring his career\, Simon has traveled extensively to work on large sporting events such as World Cup Soccer\, Super Bowls\, and the Olympics. His feature stories are as diverse as golfers in Greenland\, soccer in Zambia\, and badminton in Indonesia. Somewhere along the way Simon learned how to make people sit still and has created portraits of some of today’s most memorable athletes. \nHis editorial and commercial clients include the International Olympic Committee\, Sports Illustrated\, the All England Lawn and Tennis Club\, ESPN\, and Canon. He received a Lucie Award in 2016 for Achievement in Sports Photography. He has also received awards from the World Press Foundation\, Pictures of the Year\, and the International Olympic Committee. The London Observer chose one of Simon’s photographs to be included in their list of the World’s 50 Greatest Sports Photographs.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/sports-illustrated-photographer-simon-bruty-to-present-his-work/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230125T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230125T210000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230112T022516Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230112T022516Z
UID:4391-1674675000-1674680400@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Sports Illustrated Photographer\, Simon Bruty to present his work
DESCRIPTION:Come and see images that have defined the sports world for the past three decades as photographer Simon Bruty presents work at Jody Richards Hall Auditorium Wednesday\, January 25 at 7:30 PM in his event sponsored by Canon USA. We request that you register for this FREE event here. \nDuring his career\, Simon has traveled extensively to work on large sporting events such as World Cup Soccer\, Super Bowls\, and the Olympics. His feature stories are as diverse as golfers in Greenland\, soccer in Zambia\, and badminton in Indonesia. Somewhere along the way Simon learned how to make people sit still and has created portraits of some of today\’s most memorable athletes. \nHis editorial and commercial clients include the International Olympic Committee\, Sports Illustrated\, the All England Lawn and Tennis Club\, ESPN\, and Canon. He received a Lucie Award in 2016 for Achievement in Sports Photography. He has also received awards from the World Press Foundation\, Pictures of the Year\, and the International Olympic Committee. The London Observer chose one of Simon\’s photographs to be included in their list of the World\’s 50 Greatest Sports Photographs.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/sports-illustrated-photographer-simon-bruty-to-present-his-work-2/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230206T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230206T220000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230202T212105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230202T212105Z
UID:4394-1675710000-1675720800@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Career Day Prep
DESCRIPTION:Come meet with other students to take headshots\, look over resumes and portfolios\, and learn tips to get you ready for Career Day! It will be a relaxed night of support and inspiration for everyone that attends.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/career-day-prep-2/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230206T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230206T220000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230202T212105Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230208T020318Z
UID:4089-1675710000-1675720800@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Career Day Prep
DESCRIPTION:Come meet with other students to take headshots\, look over resumes and portfolios\, and learn tips to get you ready for Career Day! It will be a relaxed night of support and inspiration for everyone that attends.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/career-day-prep/
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230224T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230224T153000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230202T161612Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230202T161612Z
UID:4393-1677229200-1677252600@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Career Day 2023 at WKUPJ
DESCRIPTION:What: WKU Photojournalism Career Day \nWhen: Friday\, Feb. 24\, 9 a.m. until mid to late afternoon \nRoundtable discussion – 12:30-1:30\, Room 127 \nWhere: PJ lab area \nWKU PJ Career Day is a unique opportunity for WKU School of Media students (including minors) to have interaction and discussion with members of the photojournalism industry. This is a chance for freshman to seniors to meet with several professionals throughout the day to show your work and begin the all-important process of making contacts for future internships\, jobs and freelance opportunities. Though it is not the main purpose of this event\, participation has led to many internships and other employment opportunities over the years. More important than this\, it is an opportunity to make several connections within the profession students have chosen to pursue\, as well as practice interacting with these professionals. \nWe have a great group of approximately 15 reviewers coming in from as far as San Antonio and Chicago to right here in Kentucky. This isn’t just about showing your work\, it is about having the opportunity to meet and interact with significant people working within the profession. \nHere is who is scheduled to appear: \n\nJon Cherry – Independent (Louisville)\nMichel Fortier – San Antonio Express-News\nMax Gersh – The Indianapolis Star\nGary Hairlson – St. Louis Post-Dispatch\nJeremy Harmon – The Tennessean\nDaniel Houghton – Stand Together\nMark Humphrey – Associated Press (Tennessee)\nBrett Marshall – Kertis Creative\nCaitlin McMekin – Knoxville News Sentinel\nDijana Muminovic – Independent (Bosnia)\nPhillip Murrell – WHAS 11\nPatrick Murphy-Racey – Freelance (Knoxville)\nGrace Ramey – Bowling Green Daily News\nSteven Rosenberg – Chicago Tribune\nDenny Simmons – Courier & Press (Evansville)\nSteve Smart – Deloitte\nKylene White – Freelance (Louisville)
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/career-day-2023-at-wkupj-2/
LOCATION:JRH Room 127\, 1665 Normal St.\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture,Workshops
ORGANIZER;CN="James Kenney":MAILTO:james.kenney@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230224T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230224T153000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230202T161612Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230216T182416Z
UID:4087-1677229200-1677252600@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Career Day 2023 at WKUPJ
DESCRIPTION:Scenes from the 2022 Career Day at Western Kentucky University\nWhat: WKU Photojournalism Career Day \nWhen: Friday\, Feb. 24\, 9 a.m. until mid to late afternoon \nRoundtable discussion – 12:30-1:30\, Room 127 \nWhere: PJ lab area \nWKU PJ Career Day is a unique opportunity for WKU School of Media students (including minors) to have interaction and discussion with members of the photojournalism industry. This is a chance for freshman to seniors to meet with several professionals throughout the day to show your work and begin the all-important process of making contacts for future internships\, jobs and freelance opportunities. Though it is not the main purpose of this event\, participation has led to many internships and other employment opportunities over the years. More important than this\, it is an opportunity to make several connections within the profession students have chosen to pursue\, as well as practice interacting with these professionals. \nWe have a great group of approximately 15 reviewers coming in from as far as San Antonio and Chicago to right here in Kentucky. This isn’t just about showing your work\, it is about having the opportunity to meet and interact with significant people working within the profession. \nHere is who is scheduled to appear: \n\nJon Cherry – Independent (Louisville)\nMichel Fortier – San Antonio Express-News\nMax Gersh – The Indianapolis Star\nGary Hairlson – St. Louis Post-Dispatch\nJeremy Harmon – The Tennessean\nDaniel Houghton – Stand Together\nMark Humphrey – Associated Press (Tennessee)\nBrett Marshall – Kertis Creative\nCaitlin McMekin – Knoxville News Sentinel\nDijana Muminovic – Independent (Bosnia)\nPhillip Murrell – WHAS 11\nPatrick Murphy-Racey – Freelance (Knoxville)\nGrace Ramey – Bowling Green Daily News\nSteven Rosenberg – Chicago Tribune\nDenny Simmons – Courier & Press (Evansville)\nSteve Smart – Deloitte\nKylene White – Freelance (Louisville)
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/career-day-2023-at-wkupj/
LOCATION:JRH Room 127\, 1665 Normal St.\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture,Workshops
ORGANIZER;CN="James Kenney":MAILTO:james.kenney@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230321T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230321T203000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230309T162537Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230309T162537Z
UID:4395-1679425200-1679430600@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Scott Strazzante to present his mobile media photography
DESCRIPTION:Tuesday\, March 21 \nReception at 4:00 | School of Media gallery | refreshments will be served \nLecture at 7:00 | Jody Richards Hall auditorium \n \nShooting From the Hip\, an iPhone image exhibition by Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Scott Strazzante will have an opening reception and lecture Tuesday\, March 21 in the School of Media’s gallery and auditorium in Jody Richards Hall. Scott\, using only his iPhone\, captures the whimsy and irony\, struggle and strength of everyday America. His twist on classic street photography fuses his shooting from the hip style with the serendipity of life\, for a revealing vision of today\’s world. Start following Scott today on Instagram at @scottstrazzante and get inspired to become the image maker you always wanted to be. \nScott will be available for questions at the gallery exhibition opening and then be sure to come back to see more of his work and hear him talk about how he uses his mobile device as a powerful tool in his collection of cameras. Free parking is available after 4:30 in the Chestnut St. lot at the end of regents drive.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/scott-strazzante-to-present-his-mobile-media-photography-2/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230321T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20230321T203000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230309T162537Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230309T162726Z
UID:4114-1679425200-1679430600@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Scott Strazzante to present his mobile media photography
DESCRIPTION:Tuesday\, March 21 \nReception at 4:00 | School of Media gallery | refreshments will be served \nLecture at 7:00 | Jody Richards Hall auditorium \n \nShooting From the Hip\, an iPhone image exhibition by Pulitzer Prize-winning photographer Scott Strazzante will have an opening reception and lecture Tuesday\, March 21 in the School of Media’s gallery and auditorium in Jody Richards Hall. Scott\, using only his iPhone\, captures the whimsy and irony\, struggle and strength of everyday America. His twist on classic street photography fuses his shooting from the hip style with the serendipity of life\, for a revealing vision of today’s world. Start following Scott today on Instagram at @scottstrazzante and get inspired to become the image maker you always wanted to be. \nScott will be available for questions at the gallery exhibition opening and then be sure to come back to see more of his work and hear him talk about how he uses his mobile device as a powerful tool in his collection of cameras. Free parking is available after 4:30 in the Chestnut St. lot at the end of regents drive.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/scott-strazzante-to-present-his-mobile-media-photography/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20230905
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20231021
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230828T162422Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230904T230603Z
UID:4126-1693872000-1697846399@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:'My Soul Aches': Ukraine's Mortal Courage
DESCRIPTION:School of Media & Communication Gallery | Jody Richards Hall\, WKU \nM-W 9:00 am – 9:00 pm | TH – F 9:00 am – 4:00 pm* \n \nThe School of Media & Communications invites you to explore the heart-wrenching reality\, “‘My Soul Aches’: Ukraine’s Mortal Courage” exhibition of images by Carol Guzy\, at Jody Richards Hall Gallery on the campus of Western Kentucky University. \nStep into a world of raw emotions\, stark honesty\, and the undeniable power of visual storytelling in this recent body of work from four-time Pulitzer Prize-Winning photojournalist Carol Guzy as we unveil a stunning collection of nearly 60 large format printed photographs that capture the essence and reality of the on-going war in Ukraine. Prepare to be moved as you journey through these captivating images allowing you to connect with the people of Ukraine on a deeply personal level and bear witness to the resilience and spirit of the Ukrainian people. Guzy’s work speaks to the unvarnished truth of conflict\, offering a glimpse into the lives of those affected by the war. Guzy was the 2022 recipient of the Fleischaker/Greene Award for Courageous International Reporting from WKU School of Media. \nWARNING: The content in this exhibition may be difficult for some to view\, however these images were taken to connect us to the experiences of others in the hope we can better understand their suffering.  \n* Open only on days the University is open\, parking is free after 4:30 pm on the Chestnut Street South Lot. \n  \nCarol Guzy: A Lens of Compassion and Courage in a World of Conflict \nFor over four decades\, Carol Guzy has been a humble ambassador in the world of photojournalism. With an unerring eye for capturing the raw\, emotional essence of human stories\, Guzy has earned her place among the most celebrated photojournalists of our time. \nCarol Guzy\nBorn with an innate curiosity and a passion for storytelling\, Guzy embarked on her career in the early ’80s. Her unflinching commitment to truth and her remarkable ability to empathize with her subjects have garnered her four Pulitzer Prizes\, one of only two journalists to have achieved this accomplishment. \nGuzy’s recent work from Ukraine is an exemplar of her unmatched skill in documenting the human experience during times of crisis. Her photographs from the war-torn region are haunting and real\, encapsulating the pain\, resilience\, and hope of the Ukrainian people. Through her lens\, we witness the devastating impact of conflict on families\, the bravery of those defending their homeland\, and the indomitable spirit of a nation striving for peace. \nIn a world often marred by chaos and division\, Carol Guzy’s work\, from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the Kosovo War to Hurricane Katrina to the ISIS conflicts in the Middle East\, serves as a beacon of truth and understanding. She reminds us that behind every headline and statistic\, there are real people with real stories. Her photographs from Ukraine are not just images; they are windows into the heart and soul of a nation\, a testament to her unwavering commitment to bearing witness to the world’s most pressing issues. Carol Guzy continues to inspire and educate through her powerful visual storytelling\, leaving an indelible mark on the world of photojournalism. \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/my-soul-aches-ukraines-mortal-courage/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery
CATEGORIES:JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20230905T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20231020T235959
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20230828T162422Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20230828T162422Z
UID:4396-1693872000-1697846399@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:\'My Soul Aches\': Ukraine\'s Mortal Courage
DESCRIPTION:School of Media & Communication Gallery | Jody Richards Hall\, WKU \nM-W 9:00 am – 9:00 pm | TH – F 9:00 am – 4:00 pm* \n \nThe School of Media & Communications invites you to explore the heart-wrenching reality\, \”\’My Soul Aches\’: Ukraine\’s Mortal Courage\” exhibition of images by Carol Guzy\, at Jody Richards Hall Gallery on the campus of Western Kentucky University. \nStep into a world of raw emotions\, stark honesty\, and the undeniable power of visual storytelling in this recent body of work from four-time Pulitzer Prize-Winning photojournalist Carol Guzy as we unveil a stunning collection of nearly 60 large format printed photographs that capture the essence and reality of the on-going war in Ukraine. Prepare to be moved as you journey through these captivating images allowing you to connect with the people of Ukraine on a deeply personal level and bear witness to the resilience and spirit of the Ukrainian people. Guzy\’s work speaks to the unvarnished truth of conflict\, offering a glimpse into the lives of those affected by the war. Guzy was the 2022 recipient of the Fleischaker/Greene Award for Courageous International Reporting from WKU School of Media. \nWARNING: The content in this exhibition may be difficult for some to view\, however these images were taken to connect us to the experiences of others in the hope we can better understand their suffering.  \n* Open only on days the University is open\, parking is free after 4:30 pm on the Chestnut Street South Lot. \n  \nCarol Guzy: A Lens of Compassion and Courage in a World of Conflict \nFor over four decades\, Carol Guzy has been a humble ambassador in the world of photojournalism. With an unerring eye for capturing the raw\, emotional essence of human stories\, Guzy has earned her place among the most celebrated photojournalists of our time. \n\nBorn with an innate curiosity and a passion for storytelling\, Guzy embarked on her career in the early \’80s. Her unflinching commitment to truth and her remarkable ability to empathize with her subjects have garnered her four Pulitzer Prizes\, one of only two journalists to have achieved this accomplishment. \nGuzy\’s recent work from Ukraine is an exemplar of her unmatched skill in documenting the human experience during times of crisis. Her photographs from the war-torn region are haunting and real\, encapsulating the pain\, resilience\, and hope of the Ukrainian people. Through her lens\, we witness the devastating impact of conflict on families\, the bravery of those defending their homeland\, and the indomitable spirit of a nation striving for peace. \nIn a world often marred by chaos and division\, Carol Guzy\’s work\, from the fall of the Berlin Wall to the Kosovo War to Hurricane Katrina to the ISIS conflicts in the Middle East\, serves as a beacon of truth and understanding. She reminds us that behind every headline and statistic\, there are real people with real stories. Her photographs from Ukraine are not just images; they are windows into the heart and soul of a nation\, a testament to her unwavering commitment to bearing witness to the world\’s most pressing issues. Carol Guzy continues to inspire and educate through her powerful visual storytelling\, leaving an indelible mark on the world of photojournalism. \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/my-soul-aches-ukraines-mortal-courage-2/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery
CATEGORIES:JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20240116
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20240217
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20240121T180911Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240121T182204Z
UID:4257-1705363200-1708127999@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Mountain Workshops Gallery on Paris and Bourbon County Opens
DESCRIPTION:The Visual Journalism & Photography program in WKU’s School of Media & Communication announces the opening of an exhibition in Jody Richards Hall gallery featuring more than 60 images and short-form documentaries of the people and places of Paris and Bourbon County as part of the 47th annual Mountain Workshops. \n \nThe exhibition titled Horses. History. Hospitality. And the richness of the people will be on display January 16-February 16. Gallery hours are 9 a.m.-9 p.m. Monday-Wednesday and 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Thursday. The gallery will be closed when WKU is closed due to weather or for holidays. \nNestled in the heart of Kentucky’s Bluegrass region\, with a verdant\, gently rolling landscape\, Bourbon County is home to elegant Thoroughbred farms and multimillion-dollar racehorses. But\, as Bourbon County Judge-Executive Michael Williams says\, it’s the richness of the people who make this Kentucky community unique. From a revitalized Main Street in Paris\, brimming with local stores\, to the tiny hamlets of Millersburg\, North Middletown\, Clintonville and Centerville\, there is a palpable sense of pride among the people who inhabit Bourbon County’s 292 square miles. \nMore than 60 student and professional photographers and videographers from around the nation\, along with a staff of nearly 40 teachers\, editors and assistants\, spent the last week of October 2023 capturing the stories of this distinctive American community. \nAbout the Mountain Workshops: As the leaves fall annually\, the WKU Visual Journalism & Photography program’s Mountain Workshops draws together a team of dedicated teachers and determined participants for a week of compelling storytelling in Kentucky. Together they explore the richness of these communities\, the lives of the people who live in them\, and the beauty of the landscapes. Participants gain hands-on experience telling stories in the documentary tradition. In return\, the community receives a unique document of their county through both compelling visual imagery and written stories. \nCurrently\, an unprecedented 40 counties in the state of Kentucky have been documented in a historically significant way. In its early years\, the Mountain Workshops also documented five communities in north-central Tennessee\, part of the Cumberland Gap region the two states share. For a unique journey through the Mountain Workshops 48-year history\, view the documentary at http://mountainworkshops.org/history/. \nContact: Tim Broekema\, tim.broekema@wku.edu
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/mountain-workshops-gallery-on-paris-and-bourbon-county-opens/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20240123T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20240123T203000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20240121T182117Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240121T194859Z
UID:4259-1706038200-1706041800@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Spring 2024 Majors Meeting
DESCRIPTION:Are you interested in pursuing photography or visual journalism  and documentary as a career? Are you curious what that might mean? Please come to our spring semester majors meeting Tuesday\, January 23 at 7:30 pm in JRH 127. Lots of information\, get a chance to meet other students with similar interests and perhaps even win a tacky door prize! We are looking forward to seeing you there.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/spring-2024-majors-meeting/
LOCATION:JRH Room 127\, 1665 Normal St.\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Major's Meetings
ORGANIZER;CN="James Kenney":MAILTO:james.kenney@wku.edu
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20240313T181500
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20240313T211500
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20240228T172029Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240228T172029Z
UID:4172-1710353700-1710364500@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Roommates: From Western to The White House
DESCRIPTION:Follow the life journey of two Western Kentucky University photojournalism students and see how they landed a career documenting the biggest election in a century\nWestern Kentucky University’s School of Media and Communication and The John B. Gaines Family Lecture Series present an exhibition of photographs and an evening presentation showcasing Jabin Botsford and Demetrius Freeman’s photographic journey From Western to the White House. \n \n\nWednesday\, March 13\, 2024 \n6:15 p.m. Photo Exhibition\, Jody Richards Hall Gallery\, Western Kentucky University \n7:00 p.m. Evening Presentation\, Jody Richards Hall Auditorium\, Western Kentucky University \nNOTE: Parking is free after 4:30 in the Chestnut St. lot at the end of Regents Ave. \n\nA little over a decade ago\, Western Kentucky University students Jabin Botsford and Demetrius Freeman shared an apartment on Park Street. Their ambition to make a name for themselves in photojournalism was high as they worked their way through the strenuous rigors of academic life. After graduation\, they each went their separate way\, Botsford landing his first job at The Washington Post while Freeman cut his teeth as a freelance photojournalist and eventually a staff photographer for the New York City Mayor’s Office. \nBotsford has documented the Trump Presidency since the beginning\, capturing many of the iconic images that became highly discussed news revelations. For four years he reported daily to The White House providing some of the most comprehensive visual documentation of the Trump Presidency. In 2020\, Freeman was brought on as a staff photojournalist for The Washington Post. Botsford was assigned to document President Donald Trump and Freeman was assigned to cover Senator Joe Biden’s campaign for President. Following the 2021 Biden inauguration\, the two former roommates were back together again\, this time on Pennsylvania Avenue. \nBoth photojournalists will discuss their journey from Western to The White House and photojournalism\’s role in political news and its importance during an election year. Presidential campaigns are highly staged events\, and they will talk about finding a split second of reality in such high-pressure situations. \nA gallery exhibit of over 60 photographs\, will showcase their work spanning their career\, both in and out of the White House. The gallery will remain on display through April 19. \n  \nOur Guests\nJabin Botsford is a staff photographer at The Washington Post. \nHe is a graduate of Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green\, KY with a degree in photojournalism and sociology. \nJabin began his career at the Washington Post March 2015 and was assigned to cover Donald J. Trump’s first presidential campaign that summer. Once President Trump took office\, Jabin was stationed at The White House throughout his term covering the Presidency. \nHe was named 2019 and 2017 White House News Photographers Association Photographer of the Year. \nJabin has interned for the New York Times in both New York City and in their Washington DC bureau. He interned at The Los Angeles Times in Los Angeles California and for The Washington Post in Washington DC. \nJabin participated at the 2012 and 2013 Mountain Workshops. In October of 2013 he was a student at The Eddie Adams Workshop XXVI. He has been recognized by Pictures of the Year International\, College Photographer of the Year\, The William Randolph Hearst Photojournalism Award program\, the Associated Collegiate Press\, the National Press Photographers Association\, the Kentucky News Photographers Association\, The Atlanta Photojournalism Seminar\, and many others. His images and multimedia have been published in The New York Times\, The Washington Post\, The Los Angeles Times\, The Wall Street Journal\, AARP\, and numerous other publications throughout the country. \nAs a student he placed first in the 2014 Hearst National Journalism Awards Championship photojournalism shootout as well as receiving awards for best photo and best portfolio. He has been named Student Photographer of the year two years in a row by the Kentucky News Photographer’s Association and named Sports Photographer of the Year two years in a row by College Photographer of the Year. Jabin has also been named Student Photographer of the year by the Ohio News Photographers Association\, the White House News Photographers Association and The NPPA Southern Short Corse. \nJabin is currently based in Washington\, DC. \n  \nDemetrius Freeman is a Staff Political Photojournalist at The Washington Post. \nDemetrius holds a BA in photojournalism with a minor in political science from Western Kentucky University. He has studied abroad in Madrid\, Spain and has completed an international master’s program at the Danish School of Media & Journalism in Aarhus\, Denmark. \nDemetrius began working at The Washington Post in August 2020\, covering Joe Biden’s presidential campaign during that summer.  Once President Biden was elected\, Demetrius started photographing more often from The White House. \nHe has worked as a photographer for the New York City Mayor’s office\, under Mayor Bill de Blasio. He has also worked as a freelance visual journalism and creative director based in New York City before being hired fulltime by The Washington Post. \nHe has held internships at The Chautauquan Daily\, The New York Times\, and The Tampa Bay Times. He also worked as a photographer for the New York City Mayor’s Office. \nDemetrius has participated in several workshops and seminars including The Mountain Workshop\, The Atlanta Photojournalism Seminar\, The New York Times Portfolio Review\, The New York Times Safety & Security Workshop\, The Missouri Photo Workshop\, and is an alumni of The Eddie Adams Workshop XXVII. Demetrius is a member of the National Press Photographers Association (NPPA)\, the National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ)\, and Diversify.Photo. \n\nContacts for lecture series and gallery exhibition\nIf you need more information about the lecture series or want to connect with one of the speakers\, contact organizer Jonathan Adams jonathan.adams@wku.edu. \nThe photo exhibition will be on display March 13 – April 19\, from 9-5 M-TH when WKU is open. For more information about the photo exhibit please contact Tim Broekema tim.broekema@wku.edu. \n\nAbout the John B. Gaines Family Lecture Series\nThe John B. Gaines Family Lecture Series\, launched in 2004 in honor of the 150th anniversary of the Gaines’ family-owned newspaper\, the Daily News\, has brought several award-winning international journalists to WKU.  Previous lecture participants include the Indianapolis Star Pulitzer Prize-winning team that uncovered the USA Gymnastics sex abuse cases; The Cincinnati Enquirer Pulitzer Prize-winning team that documented the addiction crisis\, journalism icon John Seigenthaler and his son\, former NBC network news anchor John Seigenthaler Jr.; Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Leonard Pitts of The Miami Herald; and Chicago Tribune photojournalist and official White House photographer Pete Souza.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/roommates-from-western-to-the-white-house/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture,JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20240919T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20241116T235959
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20240919T170452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240919T170452Z
UID:4191-1726704000-1731801599@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:The Highest Office Photo Exhibition
DESCRIPTION:The Highest Office \nA visual journey of those who aspired to become president\, celebrating the intersection of photojournalism and political history. \n \n  \nJRH Gallery \nM-W: 9:00 – 9:00 \nTh – F: 9:00 – 4:00 \nThrough Nov. 16 [A closing alumni homecoming reception before game] \n  \nThe Highest Office is a powerful photo exhibit featuring iconic images captured by award-winning alumni of Western Kentucky University\’s School of Media and Communication\’s Visual Journalism and Photography program. These photographers chronicle the journey presidential candidates take before assuming the nation\’s highest office\, providing a rare and intimate look at the human side of American political campaigns. \nFrom Beto O’Rourke standing on a stump in a front yard in Iowa\, George W. Bush making his final plea just days before an election\, the thousands that gather for the national conventions or images from an assassination attempt on Donald Trump\, each photograph tells a unique story. These moments remind us that before a president occupies the White House\, they must first navigate the complex and emotional path to leadership. \nIf you are interested in developing any learning opportunity or wish to coordinate a hosted tour\, please contact tim.broekema@wku.edu\, gallery curator. \n\nFEATURED ARTISTS INCLUDE: \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/the-highest-office-photo-exhibition/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250127T000000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250221T235959
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20250124T192740Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250124T192740Z
UID:4216-1737936000-1740182399@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:49th Mountain Workshops Gallery exhibition open
DESCRIPTION:The School of Media & Communication is proud to announce the opening of the latest exhibition Feels Like Home: Williamsburg\, Whitley County\, Kentucky at the Gallery in Jody Richards Hall. \n\nJRH Gallery Through February 21\n\nM-W: 9:00 am – 7:00 pm\nTH-F: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm\nGallery is closed when WKU is closed.\n\n\n  \n \nIn the Southeast corner of Kentucky near Tennessee and Virginia\, Whitley County is a mountain landscape sliced by Interstate 75 and the Cumberland River. The city of Corbin is on the north end and Williamsburg\, the county seat and home to the University of the Cumberlands\, lies in the center. This is an Appalachian community with a rich past where friendly\, hard-working people are trying to figure out their future. \n“This is my community\, this is my people and this is what is important to me\,” local resident Laurel West said. “It feels like home; it’s good people here and that makes a difference.” \nDirected by Western Kentucky University’s Visual Journalism & Photography program\, 77 student and professional photographers and videographers from around the nation\, along with a staff of nearly 60 educators\, editors and assistants\, spent the last week of October 2024 capturing the stories of this distinctive American community. \n“You need a little swagger\,” Williamsburg Mayor Roddy Harrison said. “Larger cities might have more swagger\, but we can swag with the best of them. You have to see our community to understand our community.” \nCome and see the swagger now through February 21 on the campus of WKU at Jody Richards Hall. \n 
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/49th-mountain-workshops-gallery-exhibition-opens/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery
CATEGORIES:JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Chicago:20250304T180000
DTEND;TZID=America/Chicago:20250418T210000
DTSTAMP:20260425T071841
CREATED:20250207T190756Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250715T181650Z
UID:4223-1741111200-1745010000@wkuvjp.com
SUMMARY:Birds Doing Stuff\, a photo exhibit by Steve Jessmore
DESCRIPTION:The School of Media & Communication is delighted to host Steve Jessmore and an exhibit of his award-winning work\, “Birds Doing Stuff” in the Jody Richards Hall Gallery on the campus of Western Kentucky University March 4 – April 18.\n\nThis project aims at showcasing the beauty and fragility of a tiny slice of Torch River\, located in northwest Michigan\, which also happens to be the photographer’s front yard. What’s at stake for this river\, as for many other rivers that are lake tributaries\, is the symbiotic relationship between an ecosystem and its human stewards.\n\n\n\nMarch 4\n\n 	Opening Reception  |  6:00 PM  | Jody Richards Hall Atrium\n 	Public Presentation  |  7:00 PM  |  Jody Richards Hall Auditorium\n\nJRH Gallery Through April 18\n\n 	M-W: 9:00 am – 7:00 pm\n 	TH-F: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm\n 	Gallery is closed when WKU is closed\n\n\n\n\nIn 2020\, COVID left a void. Steve Jessmore’s work\, as many of us\, was put on hold. People weren’t able to do things – Jessmore included. His wife Brenda challenged him. “You need to use your talents. Do what you always wanted to do. Who knows how long this will last. Every day is a gift from God and you have to make the best of each and every one like it was your last\,” she said.\n\nReeds Lake\, East Grand Rapids\, Mich. Aug 9\, 2022\n\nIt took him a few months\, but he finally found his inspiration and direction. He bought a kayak and\, in his travels\, discovered ducks and other birds. After spending hundreds of hours and making thousands of images\, he believed he found what he had been looking for – Birds doing stuff.\n\nTurning a loss of freelance photography work and isolation from Covid to his advantage\, Steve Jessmore vowed to make this gift of time a learning experience. Mid-2020 he began making pictures of his new-found passion. Using his career photojournalism skills and storytelling roots\, Jessmore began capturing wildlife being wildlife and living their lives in the communities around him. Hundreds of hours and tens of thousands of photos later\, he gained confidence in the new craft he was learning. In 2021 less than a year after starting to photograph birds\, two of his images swept the professional division of the National 2021 Audubon Society’s photography contest\, winning 1st and honorable mention.\n\nFollowing his community roots as a photojournalist\, Jessmore has captured moments of wildlife nearly entirely in Michigan. He has photographed primarily near his Grand Rapids home and at their cottage on the Torch River. He believes there’s so much around him that he doesn’t need to chase the unusual to find satisfaction. “I love to create art in dynamic situations which feature wildlife moments in the communities around me’” he said.\n\n“I approach birds with the same ethics I’ve practiced in my photojournalism. I don’t make them fly\, bait them or try to intrude on their lives\, but rather let them be themselves. I am the casual observer creating images and making art.”\n\nJessmore’s hope is that his images can be a voice for the birds\, bringing awareness to these treasures that lives amongst us and how fragile the environment is. He would like us to take notice and realize we need to be stewards. We can enjoy our time among them\, but realize we need to take care and preserve their habitat and our resources so we can all continue to live side by side.\n\nYou can support Jessmore and help continue this important work here.\n\nSTEVE JESSMORE BIO\nSteve Jessmore\, of Alto\, Mich.\, has been a photographer his entire life. Known for his community and storytelling focus\, he was a 35-year photojournalist working as chief photographer/Director of Photography for the Flint Journal\, The Saginaw News and the Myrtle Beach Sun News.  He’s won numerous Michigan\, national and international photojournalism awards and has been named a five-time Michigan Photographer of the Year and Robert F. Kennedy Photojournalism awardee. He also was staff photographer for his alma mater Central Michigan University for five-years.\n\nIn August of 2018 Jessmore stepped away from Central Michigan University\, got married and moved to Grand Rapids. He began freelancing full time for colleges and universities which he continues to do.\n\nSteve Jessmore\n\nWhen his freelance work was put on hold in 2020 due to Covid pandemic Jessmore struggled to stay busy. He set a goal to be constructive with his time\, learn something new and set out to improve his photography. That experiment led him on a path to becoming an avid outdoor photographer with a love for all wildlife- but especially birds.\n\nIn 2021\, two of his bird images swept the professional division of the National 2021 Audubon Photography contest\, winning 1st and HM. He won another first place in the 2022 national contest- The Fisher Prize for the most creative approach to photographing with his image “Feeding Frenzy” featuring Norther Shoveler ducks. This image also graced the cover of the Audubon’s summer awards issue magazine. His 2021 winning “Northern and Cardinal in Flight” is also featured on the official National Audubon 2023 membership card.\n\nJessmore’s and his avian photography has been featured/published on WCMU’s Discover Michigan\, NPR Stateside\, WOOD-TV 8\, M-LIVE and ABC On Your Side. He’s been published in National Audubon Magazine\, The Smithsonian\, Ducks Unlimited and Cornell Lab of Ornithology annual report. He’s had solo exhibitions of his art at the Baber Gallery at Central Michigan University\, The Saginaw Art Museum\, The Flint Art Walk\, and also at Saginaw Valley State University.
URL:https://wkuvjp.com/event/birdsdoingstuff/
LOCATION:JRH Gallery / Atrium and Auditorium\, 1665 Normal Drive\, Bowling Green\, KY\, 42101\, United States
CATEGORIES:Guest Lecture,JRH Gallery
ORGANIZER;CN="Tim Broekema":MAILTO:tim.broekema@wku.edu
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