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Jacqueline Kennedy and the Mona Lisa

Perhaps no other White House dinner had more personal meaning for Jacqueline Kennedy than the evening honoring French Minister of Culture André Malraux at the White House on May 11, 1962. The First Lady and Malraux had developed a friendship following a tour of Paris art museums during the Kennedy’s state visit to Paris in June 1961. By according him all the courtesies normally reserved for a head of state, the Kennedys hoped to focus national attention on the role of the arts in America and encourage the development of Washington as a cultural center.  

At the end of the evening, Monsieur Malraux whispered a promise to Jacqueline Kennedy that he would send to her France’s most famous cultural treasure, La Giaconda–known as the Mona Lisa–to be displayed at the National Gallery in Washington. In December 1962, Malraux accompanied the painting to the United States where more than 700,000 people saw it at National Gallery of Art  and more than a million others viewed it at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. 

-From the JFK Library 

André Malraux, Paris, 1933 -by Philippe HalsmanA book and an exhibitionParis Magnum, Ed. by Éric Haz

André Malraux, Paris, 1933 -by Philippe Halsman

A book and an exhibition
Paris Magnum, Ed. by Éric Hazan (FlammarionandRizzoli)
Paris Magnum, la capitale par les plus grands photoreporters
Hôtel de Ville de Paris - Until 28 March 2015 
Together, the photographers [from Magnum] document the evolution of the capital from 1940 to 2000 almost more effectively than a history textbook. [Read more at L'Oeil de la Photographie]

photo from l'Oeil de la Photographie-Magnum


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 FRANCE. Paris. 1933. French writer André MALRAUX © Philippe Halsman/Magnum Photos

FRANCE. Paris. 1933. French writer André MALRAUX © Philippe Halsman/Magnum Photos


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