Silver-gelatin contact sheets on 8 x 10 in. mounts, each containing six 2¼-in. frames (one sheet with five frames), showing Senator John F. Kennedy, Jacqueline Kennedy, and their daughter Caroline on the lawn of the Kennedy home at Hyannis Port during the 1960 presidential campaign.
These images come from the well-known family sitting of July 21, 1960, taken only days after JFK secured the Democratic nomination. The photographs capture the Kennedys in relaxed domestic moments—reading to Caroline on a lawn chair, walking in the yard, and posing together beside the house. Several frames from this session were widely circulated during the campaign and became part of the visual language surrounding Kennedy’s public identity as a young family man.
The style and setting of the session strongly parallel work made at Hyannis Port by Jacques Lowe, Kennedy’s personal photographer throughout the 1960 campaign, whose archive includes closely related images from the same date. These contact sheets appear to originate from the same photographic session, showing the Kennedys in identical clothing, at the same locations on the property, and in poses matching published campaign photographs of the period. (No photographer’s stamp is present on the sheets, so authorship cannot be conclusively assigned.)
A scarce survival: vintage contact sheets from the 1960 Hyannis Port sittings seldom appear on the market, and groups of three are particularly unusual. Together they document the working sequence of an iconic early-Camelot image set, preserving moments both posed and spontaneous, including frames that were never selected for publication.
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