Kenneth Love
Directing
Known For
The magnificent murals at St. Nicholas Church in Millvale, painted by Maxo Vanka in the late 1930s, are legendary. Filmmaker Kenneth Love conveys the significance of these images and the impact they have had on art historians, parishioners, and the public.
Maxo Vanka’s Masterpiece: The Murals at St. Nicholas Church
Documentary with new new high-definition footage of the Fallingwater house, but centered on an older 1982 interview with Edgar Kaufmann Jr.
Fallingwater: Frank Lloyd Wright's Masterwork, with Reflections by Edward Kaufmann jr.

Using Harris' life as a lens through which they examine the 20th century African-American experience, the filmmakers present an honest image of black life in that era. Through Teenie's images, the mundane and glorious history of Pittsburgh's black communities comes forth. Teenie's work counters and disrupts many long held stereotypes and beliefs and becomes the foundation of a critical visual legacy.
One Shot: The Life and Work of Teenie Harris

The Pittsburgh Courier was the leading Black newspaper of the last century. No mere journal of African American life, the Courier was a muckraking crusader in the vanguard of the civil rights movement. Its fourteen national editions had a peak circulation of over three hundred fifty thousand. With accounts from Courier reporters and employees, and scholars like John Hope Franklin, this new documentary reveals the role of the Pittsburgh Courier in reporting and shaping African American history.
Newspaper of Record: The Pittsburgh Courier 1907-1965
Clyde Hare has been photographing Pittsburgh since 1950. In a film by Kenneth Love, Hare reflects on his philosophy and photographs and explains why he has been attracted to Pittsburgh for so long. This documentary highlights the accomplishments of Clyde Hare and shows the city of Pittsburgh through his lens.