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Amos Paul Kennedy Jr. collection

Overview

Scope and Contents

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

Pre-2011 Accessions

2011 Accessions

2012 Accessions

2014 Accessions

2015 Accessions

2016 Accession

2018 Accessions

2019 Accession

2020 Accession

2021 Accession(s)

2022 Accession(s)

2023 Accessions

2024 Accessions

2025 Accessions

2026 Accessions (Ongoing)



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Amos Paul Kennedy Jr. collection, circa 1992-2026 | Rare Book & Manuscript Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

By Taylor Henning, Dana Miller, and Isabella Sauer

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Collection Overview

Title: Amos Paul Kennedy Jr. collection, circa 1992-2026Add to your cart.

ID: 01/MSS00100

Primary Creator: Kennedy, Amos Paul, Jr.

Extent: 20.0 Cubic Feet

Arrangement:

The Amos Paul Kennedy Jr. collection consists of 15 series arranged by chronologically by year of accession. Series X combines unidentified pre-2011 accessions.

The collection is described at the item level. The contents of each print are transcribed in quotations, following the capitalization and wording of the prints as closely as possible.

Information contained in parentheses within the quotation marks is found at the top or bottom of the print. Often this information refers to the source of the quotation on the print or an organization involved with the event promoted on the print.

Text on the background of the prints is included in brackets within quotations. Any information in brackets outside of the quotations indicates design related characteristics of the given print to distinguish it from other prints with identical text.

Date Acquired: 00/00/1997

Subjects: Artists' Books - United States, Kuba (African people), Smoking -- Folklore, Tales -- Congo (Democratic Republic), Tales -- Nigeria, Yoruba (African people) -- Folklore

Forms of Material: African Americans - Music, American poetry, Christmas music, Miniature Books, Postcards, Proverbs, African, Spirituals (Songs)

Languages: English

Scope and Contents of the Materials

This collection consists of letterpress art printed at Kennedy Prints!, Jubilee Press (also Jubalee), or elsewhere by Amos Paul Kennedy Jr. (1948-), an American letterpress printer, papermaker, educator, and social activist. Formats include postcards, posters, state road maps, and hand fans. There is also some additional promotional material for events with which Kennedy was involved. Some items for this collection are individually cataloged and searchable in Primo at the link below. Many are also digitized and available to view online as part of our Digital Collections.

See Administrative/Biographical History and Administrative Information for more information.

Collection Historical Note

Amos Paul Kennedy Jr. was born in Lafayette, Louisiana, in 1948. His father, Amos Paul Kennedy Sr., was a professor of agriculture and chemistry who taught at numerous historically black colleges and universities (HBCU) throughout his professional career. In 1972, Kennedy Jr. earned a BA in mathematics at Grambling University, and went on to pursue an MA in education.

Kennedy spent time in the Peace Corps during graduate school, which gave him the opportunity to teach mathematics in Liberia for 18 months. After contracting and recovering from malaria, he returned to the United States and settled in Gaithersburg, Maryland, taking a position with IBM as a systems programmer. He worked there for three years before moving to Cleveland, Ohio, where he worked for various computer firms and revived his interest in graduate school—this time for library science.

In 1981, Kennedy moved to Chicago, however, which once again put his formal academic plans on hold. While working for AT&T, he studied calligraphy as a hobby and took letterpress courses at Artist's Book Works, a small non-profit papermaking studio that opened in 1983. His initial interest in the printmaking process was peaked during a trip to Colonial Williamsburg, where he saw the town’s 18th century print shop and book bindery. After six months of coursework, Kennedy came into his own press and, being gifted four cabinets of type by a seasoned printer, quickly transformed his basement into a print shop. This private press was called Idiot Press, its name changing to Kennedy and Sons Fine Printing once he shifted his focus to commercial printing, and later to Jubilee Press (also Jubalee).

In 1995, Kennedy began graduate school at the University of Wisconsin, Madison and studied graphic design under Walter Hamady (1940-2019), also taking courses on the history of African art and Vodún. At this time, he moved to Bayside, a suburb of Milwaukee, and worked out of a studio there. He graduated with an MFA in 1997, and in 1998, became the first Black faculty member in the School of Fine Arts at Indiana University.

While living in York, Alabama, in 2002, Kennedy shifted his interest from books to posters and cards. He spent much of the next decade honing his craft in a series of small Alabama towns while traveling to teach, speak, and sell his work. In 2008, he moved to Detroit, Michigan where he established his print shop, Kennedy Prints!.

Using wood type and hand presses, Kennedy produces large editions of wildly colorful, typographically driven posters on inexpensive chipboard stock. His method often involves overprinting multiple layers of text and making constant, subtle alterations to the color of the inks throughout each press run, making each print being subtly unique. He passionately addresses issues of race, freedom, and equality in his work, often incorporating proverbs and tales of the Kuba and Yoruba people of Africa, as well as the work of Black American poets, such as Paul Laurence Dunbar (1872-1906). Kennedy has printed under a number of press names, including York Show Prints, Kennedy & Sons, Fine Printers, and Kennedy Prints!

As more and more artists seek to steer away from computer-generated art, Kennedy is often credited with the revival of the letterpress in contemporary and folk art.

Subject/Index Terms

Artists' Books - United States
Kuba (African people)
Smoking -- Folklore
Tales -- Congo (Democratic Republic)
Tales -- Nigeria
Yoruba (African people) -- Folklore

Administrative Information

Repository: Rare Book & Manuscript Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Access Restrictions: Open to researchers.

Use Restrictions:

The RBML reproductions policies can be found here:

http://www.library.illinois.edu/rbx/ReproductionServices.htm

The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other reproductions of copyrighted materials.

Under certain conditions specified in the law, libraries and archives are authorized to furnish a photocopy or other reproduction. One of these specified conditions is that the photocopy or reproduction is not to be "used for any purpose other than private study scholarship or research." If a user makes a request for, or later uses, a photocopy or reproduction for purposes in excess of "fair use," that user may be liable for copyright infringement.

This institution reserves the right to refuse to accept a copying order if, in its judgement, fulfillment of the order would damage materials or involve violation of copyright law.

Related Materials:

Amos Kennedy Digital Collection

Interview with Amos Kennedy (University of Wisconsin, Madison Library)

Amos Kennedy print collection (Library of Congress)

Processing Information: https://wiki.cites.uiuc.edu/wiki/display/librare/Home

Finding Aid Revision History: Revised 03/05/2026.

URL: https://go.library.illinois.edu/AmosPaulKennedyJrCatalog


Box and Folder Listing


Browse by Series:

[Series X: Pre-2011 Accessions],
[Series 1: 2011 Accessions],
[Series 2: 2012 Accessions],
[Series 3: 2014 Accessions],
[Series 4: 2015 Accessions],
[Series 5: 2016 Accession],
[Series 6: 2018 Accessions],
[Series 7: 2019 Accession],
[Series 8: 2020 Accession],
[Series 9: 2021 Accession(s)],
[Series 10: 2022 Accession(s)],
[Series 11: 2023 Accessions],
[Series 12: 2024 Accessions],
[Series 13: 2025 Accessions],
[Series 14: 2026 Accessions (Ongoing)],
[All]

Series 13: 2025 AccessionsAdd to your cart.
Box 10Add to your cart.
Folder 33Add to your cart.
Item 1: “Without community, there is no liberation (Audre Lorde)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Item 2: “You become strong by doing the things you need to be strong for. (Audre Lorde)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 34Add to your cart.
Item 1: “Don’t sleep with people who don’t read. (John Waters)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Item 2: “If you go home with somebody and they don’t have books, don’t fuck them. (John Waters)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 35: “2025. Wishing you color, subtlety, and some semblance of beauty in 2025. (Russell Maret & Annie Schlechter)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 36: “A dirty book is rarely dusty.”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 37: “As I see it today, the ability to read awoke inside me some long dormant craving to be mentally alive. (Malcom X)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 38: “FREEDOM is a hard-bought thing. (Paul Robeson)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 39: “GENERAL STRIKE”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 40: “LIFE is fair. SOCIETY isn’t.”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 41: “money OFTEN COSTS TOO MUCH. (Ralph Waldo Emerson)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 42: “Once you learn to READ, you will be FOREVER free. (Frederick Douglass)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 43: “The strong go crazy. The weak just go along. (Assata Shakur)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 44: “This country has slipped back two hundred years. (Octavia Butler), Parable of the Sower”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 45: “Time is never wasted unless you are employed.”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 46: “TRUTH is never uncalled for. (Frederick Douglass)”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 47: “The blindest person is the one who does not want to see.”, 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 48Add to your cart.
Item 1: Mailing Envelope. “Vote” printed on envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 2: Mailing Envelope. “Support The National Association of Letter Carriers Union Strong” printed on envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 3: Mailing envelope. “Read A Book” printed on envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 4: Mailing Envelope. “We will not bow down to fascism” and “VOTE but don’t vote in the dark” printed on either side of envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 5: Mailing Envelope postmarked 2 Jan 2025. Red and yellow design printed on envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 6: Mailing Envelope postmarked 21 Mar 2025. “3” and “POWER to the PEOPLE” printed on either side of envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 7: Mailing Envelope postmarked Aug 2025. “Support The National Association of Letter Carriers Union Strong” printed on envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 8: Mailing Envelope postmarked 22 Aug 2025. “Read A Book” printed on envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 9: Mailing Envelope postmarked 10 Oct 2025. “Take a Nap everyday” and “VoTe” printed on either side of envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 10: Mailing Envelope postmarked 10 Nov 2025. “VoTe” and “PRACTICE CIVIL DISOBIEDIENCE EVERYDAY” printed on either side of envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Item 11: Mailing Envelope postmarked 18 Dec 2025. “ReSIst” and “The USPS receives no money from taxes.” printed on either side of envelope., 2025Add to your cart.
Folder 49: Note from Amos Paul Kennedy Jr., 2025Add to your cart.

Browse by Series:

[Series X: Pre-2011 Accessions],
[Series 1: 2011 Accessions],
[Series 2: 2012 Accessions],
[Series 3: 2014 Accessions],
[Series 4: 2015 Accessions],
[Series 5: 2016 Accession],
[Series 6: 2018 Accessions],
[Series 7: 2019 Accession],
[Series 8: 2020 Accession],
[Series 9: 2021 Accession(s)],
[Series 10: 2022 Accession(s)],
[Series 11: 2023 Accessions],
[Series 12: 2024 Accessions],
[Series 13: 2025 Accessions],
[Series 14: 2026 Accessions (Ongoing)],
[All]


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