The International Center of Photography in New York City, the leading institution dedicated to photography and visual culture, has acquired more than 200 images created by photographer and Cal State San Bernardino professor Thomas McGovern from his 1999 book “Bearing Witness (to AIDS).”

“We’re honored to be entrusted as a repository for Thomas McGovern’s important work regarding those affected by AIDS,” says Mark Lubell, Executive Director, ICP. “This treasure trove of images and documentation from the front line of the ongoing struggle is an excellent addition to our collection —which includes photographs by Brian Weil, Gideon Mendel, and others who also documented the AIDS epidemic here and abroad.”

“Bearing Witness (to AIDS)” spans 1987–1997, a time of intense AIDS activism, which forced the pandemic into the cultural and political dialogue. People with HIV/AIDS, rejecting the label of “victim,” are seen actively taking control of their lives and their medical treatment in this straightforward and sober account.

“(Bearing Witness) was an attempt to merge the didactic and the expressive ... I hoped to demonstrate some of the depth of people's experiences about AIDS, and particularly, my own experience of it,' says McGovern, who joined CSUSB in 2000 and teaches photography in the College of Arts and Letters. “I’m pleased to see the images — and my associated research and correspondence — be added to the venerable ICP archives as a way to extend its legacy of bearing of witness to plights of those affected by AIDS.”

In addition to the more than 200 vintage silver prints, the donation includes several hours of audio featuring interviews with people affected by AIDS as well as correspondence received by the artists in response to his request for project participants. The prints will be catalogued, digitized, and made available for viewing on the ICP website.

These newly acquired works will be digitized and viewable in the near future at www.icp.org/browse.