President George W. Bush awarded the 2005 National Humanities  Medal this past Thursday, November 10, to eleven distinguished  Americans and one scholarly research project for their  contributions to the humanities. At a White House ceremony, the  President presented the National Humanities Medal to Leigh and  Leslie Keno (pictured), Walter Berns, Matthew Bogdanos, Eva  Brann, John Lewis Gaddis, Richard Gilder, Mary Ann Glendon, Alan  Charles Kors, Lewis Lehrman, Judith Martin, and the Papers of  George Washington Project at the University of Virginia.   The National Humanities Medal, first awarded in 1989 as the  Charles Frankel Prize, honors individuals and organizations whose  work has deepened the nation’s understanding of the humanities,  broadened citizens’ engagement with the humanities, or helped  preserve and expand America’s access to important humanities  resources.   “It was very exciting for the whole family,” commented Leigh  after the ceremony, which included dinner at the White House  after the oval office presentation. The Keno brothers were joined  at the ceremony by their wives and children, as well as brother  Mitchell and the twin’s father Ron. “Leslie and I had a great  time and it was a very special day for our entire family,” he  said. “It was especially exciting when President Bush put the  medals around our necks.”   The Keno brothers surmised that the award was presented to them  “mostly because of our involvement with the Antiques  Roadshow and because we encourage younger people to get  involved and interested in history and antiques.”   New York City antiques dealer Leigh Keno is president of Leigh  Keno American Antiques. During the past 18 years, he has helped  build some of the top institutional and private collections of  American furniture and decorative arts. Actively involved in the  field of American antiques since childhood, he was a fellow at  Historic Deerfield and visiting scholar at the Winterthur Museum  in Delaware. After receiving a BA in art history from Hamilton  College in 1979, Leigh came to New York City and joined William  Doyle Galleries, where he was director of the American furniture  department. In 1984 he joined Christie’s, first serving as vice  president of its appraisal company and later joining the American  furniture department as a senior specialist.   From 2001 through 2005, he and his twin brother wrote monthly  furniture and design columns for House Beautiful and  This Old House magazines, respectively. In November 2000,  Warner Books published Hidden Treasures: Searching for  Masterpieces of American Furniture, a book both Keno brothers  wrote with Joan Barzilay Freund. Leigh has co-authored two  groundbreaking articles on Boston’s Georgian chairs for the 1996  and 1998 editions of the journal American Furniture,  published by the Chipstone Foundation. Leigh is a friend of the  American Wing at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, a friend of  Historic Deerfield, and a member of the National Antique and Art  Dealers Association of America and the Antiques Dealers  Association of America. Leslie Keno is senior vice president, senior specialist, anddirector of American furniture and decorative arts at Sotheby’s.Born in upstate New York, Leslie graduated from Williams Collegewith honors in American art. While at Williams, he carried out anintensive study of early American furniture from the Charles M.Davenport collection, which culminated in a catalog and exhibitionof the collection at the Williams College Museum of Art.   During his tenure of nearly 24 years at Sotheby’s he has been  responsible for successfully selling numerous important  single-owner sales of American furniture and decorative arts,  including the collections of: Mr and Mrs Adolph H. Meyer, Mr and  Mrs Stanley Paul Sax, Mr and Mrs Lammot du Pont Copeland, and Mr  and Mrs Walter K. Jeffords, and the property of the Goddard  Family, to name but a few. Numerous record-breaking sales of  American furniture achieved during Leslie Keno’s tenure have  received international attention, increasing the public’s  awareness and appreciation of the great beauty and majesty of  America’s unique cultural heritage. Leslie has been published in  Sotheby’s Encyclopedia of Furniture and the American  Ceramic Circle Journal.   Leslie and Leigh believe in the extraordinary benefits of  television as a powerful teaching tool to inspire young people  and get them excited about material culture and history. They  appear regularly as appraisers on the hit PBS series Antiques  Roadshow, and they co-host Find!, which premiered on  WGBH in October 2003 to celebrate a world of design, style,  antiques and furnishings. Leslie is a member of the board of  directors of Sotheby’s North and South America and lectures  extensively on antiques. He and Leigh volunteer each year as  benefit auctioneers for various charity events across the  country.   The National Endowment for the Humanities gratefully acknowledges  The President’s Committee on the Arts and the Humanities for its  generous support of the 2005 National Humanities Medals.  Additional information about the National Endowment for the  Humanities and the National Humanities Medal is available online  at www.humanities.gov.          
 
    



 
						