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Helen Adams Keller

Helen Adams Keller
Artist
Charles Whitman, active 1890s - 1900s
Sitter
Helen Adams Keller, 27 Jun 1880 - 1 Jun 1968
Date
1904
Type
Photograph
Medium
Platinum print
Dimensions
Image/Sheet: 22.6 x 16.9cm (8 7/8 x 6 5/8")
1st Mount: 23.3 x 17.4cm (9 3/16 x 6 7/8")
2nd Mount: 28.1 x 21.9cm (11 1/16 x 8 5/8")
Mat: 55.9 x 40.6cm (22 x 16")
Topic
Interior
Printed Material\Book
Container\Vase
Nature & Environment\Plant\Flower\Rose
Helen Adams Keller: Female
Helen Adams Keller: Literature\Writer
Helen Adams Keller: Education and Scholarship\Educator\Lecturer
Helen Adams Keller: Society and Social Change\Reformer\Social reformer
Helen Adams Keller: Literature\Writer\Novelist
Helen Adams Keller: Society and Social Change\Reformer\Humanitarian
Helen Adams Keller: Literature\Writer\Essayist
Helen Adams Keller: Society and Social Change\Person with a Disability\Blind
Helen Adams Keller: Society and Social Change\Person with a Disability\Deaf
Helen Adams Keller: Presidential Medal of Freedom
Portrait
Credit Line
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution
Restrictions & Rights
CC0
Object number
NPG.91.105
Exhibition Label
Born Tuscumbia, Alabama
This photograph ran in an article that author and activist Helen Keller published in a 1905 issue of the Century magazine entitled “A Chat about the Hand.” Keller, who was deaf and blind, wrote, “My world is built of touch sensations, devoid of color and sound, but without color and sound it breathes and throbs with life.” The previous year, Keller had graduated with honors from Radcliffe College, where she had written her celebrated autobiography.
Keller was active in a range of social and political movements: She joined the Socialist Party of America, cofounded the ACLU, advocated for women’s suffrage, and was an early supporter of the NAACP. In 1924, she became an official ambassador for the American Foundation for the Blind. Later, she successfully lobbied for the inclusion of Title X in the 1935 Social Security Act, which ensured people who are blind could be eligible for grant assistance.
Nacida en Tuscumbia, Alabama
Esta fotografía se publicó en 1905 en la revista Century con un artículo de la autora y activista Helen Keller titulado “Hablemos de la mano”. Keller, quien era ciega y sorda, escribió: “Mi mundo se compone de sensaciones táctiles, no hay en él color ni sonido, pero aun sin color ni sonido, respira y late lleno de vida”. El año anterior se había graduado con honores de Radcliffe College, donde escribió su celebrada autobiografía.
Keller estuvo activa en diversos movimientos sociales y políticos: ingresó al Partido Socialista de América, cofundó la ACLU, abogó por el sufragio femenino y fue una de las primeras seguidoras de la NAACP. En 1924 pasó a ser embajadora oficial de la Fundación Estadounidense para Ciegos. También cabildeó con éxito por la inclusión del Título X en la Ley de Seguridad Social de 1935, que garantizó a las personas ciegas elegibilidad para subsidios estatales.
Data Source
National Portrait Gallery
Exhibition
The Struggle for Justice Refresh
On View
NPG, West Gallery 220