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Bill Foley and retired AP photographer Bob Daugherty


Pulitzer Prize winner Bill Foley and retired AP photographer Bob Daugherty will host a discussion on the highlights of their photographic careers.
Bill Foley
Bill Foley is a Pulitzer prize-winning photojournalist with many years’ experience in news, creative editorial, and corporate photography. Over the course of his career, he has worked on assignments in more than 47 countries. His work has been published in all major newspapers and magazines around the world. Foley’s work is included in a number of books on photojournalism and is shown in museums and galleries in New York, Cairo, Beirut and numerous cities in Europe. His photographs are held as well in private collections. His work was recently featured at the Indiana State Museum.
For five years he was an adjunct professor at New York University in the Tisch School of the Arts. Now living in Indianapolis, Foley continues his teaching on the power and the potential of photography to communicate at Marian University. Foley is still active as a photographer, teaches workshops, and is a speaker and panelist on a myriad of subjects from photojournalism to foreign affairs, with a focus on events and policies at work in the Middle East. More information about Foley is on his website www.billfoley.com
Bob Daugherty
Daugherty started his career with the Marian (IN) Chronicle when he was in high school. From there he joined the Indianapolis Star for several years and then began his 43 year career with AP. He eventually became AP’s assistant bureau chief and director for AP State Photo Center in Washington, a position he retired from on 2007.
Daugherty photographed nine presidents – Truman, Eisenhower, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush and Clinton. He always worked hard to persevere to be at the right place at the right time, even if it included “badgering the press secretary all day.” Just a few of his iconic photographs include President Johnson working on his speech he would not seek re-election, President Nixon on his ground-breaking trip to China and shaking hands with Premier Zhou En-Lai, President Nixon flashing the “V” sign leaving the White House on the Presidential helicopter after resigning, President Carter clasping hands with Anwar Sadat and Menechem Begin after the signing of the Middle East peace treaty, President Reagan and wife Nancy atop the Great Wall of China and in the Normandy grave site, and many other images recognized by anyone who read papers and magazines at the time.
His AP images can be found at www.apimages.com/Collection/Landing/Photographer-Bob-Daugherty/25b6e83059d54d3da0e8a7aa5c066ddf
He is still photographing and exhibiting and now lives in Noblesville IN. He was added to the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame in 2015.
Bill Foley
Bill Foley is a Pulitzer prize-winning photojournalist with many years’ experience in news, creative editorial, and corporate photography. Over the course of his career, he has worked on assignments in more than 47 countries. His work has been published in all major newspapers and magazines around the world. Foley’s work is included in a number of books on photojournalism and is shown in museums and galleries in New York, Cairo, Beirut and numerous cities in Europe. His photographs are held as well in private collections. His work was recently featured at the Indiana State Museum.
For five years he was an adjunct professor at New York University in the Tisch School of the Arts. Now living in Indianapolis, Foley continues his teaching on the power and the potential of photography to communicate at Marian University. Foley is still active as a photographer, teaches workshops, and is a speaker and panelist on a myriad of subjects from photojournalism to foreign affairs, with a focus on events and policies at work in the Middle East. More information about Foley is on his website www.billfoley.com
Bob Daugherty
Daugherty started his career with the Marian (IN) Chronicle when he was in high school. From there he joined the Indianapolis Star for several years and then began his 43 year career with AP. He eventually became AP’s assistant bureau chief and director for AP State Photo Center in Washington, a position he retired from on 2007.
Daugherty photographed nine presidents – Truman, Eisenhower, Johnson, Nixon, Ford, Carter, Reagan, Bush and Clinton. He always worked hard to persevere to be at the right place at the right time, even if it included “badgering the press secretary all day.” Just a few of his iconic photographs include President Johnson working on his speech he would not seek re-election, President Nixon on his ground-breaking trip to China and shaking hands with Premier Zhou En-Lai, President Nixon flashing the “V” sign leaving the White House on the Presidential helicopter after resigning, President Carter clasping hands with Anwar Sadat and Menechem Begin after the signing of the Middle East peace treaty, President Reagan and wife Nancy atop the Great Wall of China and in the Normandy grave site, and many other images recognized by anyone who read papers and magazines at the time.
His AP images can be found at www.apimages.com/Collection/Landing/Photographer-Bob-Daugherty/25b6e83059d54d3da0e8a7aa5c066ddf
He is still photographing and exhibiting and now lives in Noblesville IN. He was added to the Indiana Journalism Hall of Fame in 2015.
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