add_action('wp_head', function(){echo '';}, 1); Chisholm Gallery | Diana Mara Henry - Polo Art, Sporting Art, and Antiques

Diana Mara Henry

France sheep on hill, The lambing season in the Limousin, One of an extensive photographic essay on the National Stud Farm of Pompadour, France, and its environs, in black and white and color.

France sheep on hill, The lambing season in the Limousin, One of an extensive photographic essay on the National Stud Farm of Pompadour, France, and its environs, in black and white and color.
Picture 13 of 21

One of an extensive photographic essay on the National Stud Farm of Pompadour, France, and its environs, in black and white and color.

American Contemporary

Diana Mara Henry began her career as a photo editor and reporter for the Harvard Crimson, 1967-1969. After college she was a researcher for NBC news and a General Assignment Reporter for the Staten Island Advance. Going freelance in 1971, she photographed George McGovern – from the New Hampshire primaries to the National Democratic Convention, Bella Abzug and Elizabeth Holtzman. The most-published photographs of her career came as official photographer for the National Commission on International Women’s Year to document the First National Women’s Conference in Houston, TX, Other extended reports include Vietnam Veterans, 1970-1981; election night in Plains, Georgia, 1976; Women Office Workers/Nine-to-Five, 1979; the Women’s Pentagon Action, 1980; One-Room Schools and Schoolteachers of Vermont and NY, and the Natzweiler-Struthof Concentration Camp, Alsace, France; and the national stud farm at Pompadour, France.