Kelley-Lori-foreign-policy-staff-portraits-202220
Kelley-Lori-foreign-policy-staff-portraits-202220

Lori Kelley

Creative Director [email protected]

Lori Kelley is the creative director at Foreign Policy and is based in Seattle. She was previously art director at Seattle Business magazine. Before moving west, she was the art director at Politico Magazine after spending four years at the Washington Post Express, first as art director and then as managing editor of news. From 2004 to 2010, she worked at the Virginian-Pilot, helping to craft its redesign before becoming assistant director of presentation. Kelley holds a master’s in English literature from Old Dominion University and a bachelor’s in journalism and English literature from Hastings College.

Articles by Lori Kelley
A Vietnamese woman collects incense sticks in the village of Quang Phu Cau on the outskirts of Hanoi on Jan. 3. In Vietnam's “incense village,” hundreds of workers dye, dry, and whittle down bamboo bark to make the fragrant sticks ahead of the busy lunar new year holiday. MANAN VATSYAYANA/AFP/Getty Images
A Vietnamese woman collects incense sticks in the village of Quang Phu Cau on the outskirts of Hanoi on Jan. 3. In Vietnam's “incense village,” hundreds of workers dye, dry, and whittle down bamboo bark to make the fragrant sticks ahead of the busy lunar new year holiday. MANAN VATSYAYANA/AFP/Getty Images

A Week in World Photos

A boat carrying migrants is stranded in the Strait of Gibraltar before being rescued by the Spanish Guardia Civil and the Salvamento Maritimo sea search and rescue agency on Sept. 8. MARCOS MORENO/AFP/Getty Images
A boat carrying migrants is stranded in the Strait of Gibraltar before being rescued by the Spanish Guardia Civil and the Salvamento Maritimo sea search and rescue agency on Sept. 8. MARCOS MORENO/AFP/Getty Images

A Top-Down View of 2018

People play golf as an ash plume rises in the distance from the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on Hawaii's Big Island on May 15. Another violent eruption on May 17 sent ash 30,000 feet into the sky, with the U.S. Geological Survey warning that ash could fall as far as Hilo, 30 miles away. MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES
People play golf as an ash plume rises in the distance from the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii Volcanoes National Park on Hawaii's Big Island on May 15. Another violent eruption on May 17 sent ash 30,000 feet into the sky, with the U.S. Geological Survey warning that ash could fall as far as Hilo, 30 miles away. MARIO TAMA/GETTY IMAGES
A Maasai warrior jumps to reach a rope during a sporting event dubbed the Maasai Olympics at Kimana, near Kenya's bordertown with Tanzania, on Dec. 15. The event, held every two years since 2012, is an initiative of international conservation groups to offer Maasai warriors an alternative to killing lions as part of their traditional rite of passage.  YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP/Getty Images
A Maasai warrior jumps to reach a rope during a sporting event dubbed the Maasai Olympics at Kimana, near Kenya's bordertown with Tanzania, on Dec. 15. The event, held every two years since 2012, is an initiative of international conservation groups to offer Maasai warriors an alternative to killing lions as part of their traditional rite of passage. YASUYOSHI CHIBA/AFP/Getty Images

A Week in World Photos

A Palestinian woman walks into a room damaged by an Israeli airstrike earlier this week in the Gaza Strip on Nov. 14. A ceasefire held began after the worst escalation between Israel and Gaza militants since a 2014 war, but the situation remained volatile and the deal provoked sharp disagreement within the Israeli government. MAHMUD HAMS/AFP/Getty Images
A Palestinian woman walks into a room damaged by an Israeli airstrike earlier this week in the Gaza Strip on Nov. 14. A ceasefire held began after the worst escalation between Israel and Gaza militants since a 2014 war, but the situation remained volatile and the deal provoked sharp disagreement within the Israeli government. MAHMUD HAMS/AFP/Getty Images

A Week in World Photos

A voter observes election counting at the end of the first round of the presidential elections at a polling station in Antananarivo, Madagascar, on Nov. 7. (MARCO LONGARI/AFP/Getty Images)
A voter observes election counting at the end of the first round of the presidential elections at a polling station in Antananarivo, Madagascar, on Nov. 7. (MARCO LONGARI/AFP/Getty Images)

A Week in World Photos

A displaced Yemeni girl walks to class in a makeshift school in the northern district of Abs in Yemen's northwestern Hajjah province on Oct. 28. ESSA AHMED/AFP/Getty Images
A displaced Yemeni girl walks to class in a makeshift school in the northern district of Abs in Yemen's northwestern Hajjah province on Oct. 28. ESSA AHMED/AFP/Getty Images

A Week in World Photos

Palestinians throw stones and burn tires in response to Israeli forces' intervention as they gather to support the maritime demonstration to break the Gaza blockade by sea with vessels in Gaza City on Oct. 22. This photo of the shirtless protester went viral after its release, drawing comparisons to the iconic French Revolution painting, “Liberty Leading the People.” Mustafa Hassona/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
Palestinians throw stones and burn tires in response to Israeli forces' intervention as they gather to support the maritime demonstration to break the Gaza blockade by sea with vessels in Gaza City on Oct. 22. This photo of the shirtless protester went viral after its release, drawing comparisons to the iconic French Revolution painting, “Liberty Leading the People.” Mustafa Hassona/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images

A Week in World Photos

A boy adds to the light show from the Milky Way in the sky over the Tatacoa Desert, in Huila, Colombia, on Oct. 11. (Luis Acosta/AFP/Getty Images)
A boy adds to the light show from the Milky Way in the sky over the Tatacoa Desert, in Huila, Colombia, on Oct. 11. (Luis Acosta/AFP/Getty Images)

A Week in World Photos

A soldier from the Democratic Republic of the Congo is seen at a military base outside Oicha on Oct. 7. JOHN WESSELS/AFP/Getty Images
A soldier from the Democratic Republic of the Congo is seen at a military base outside Oicha on Oct. 7. JOHN WESSELS/AFP/Getty Images

A Week in World Photos

Displaced Yemeni children from the Hodeidah province shelter in a damaged house on Sept. 30 where they have been living with other displaced families in the southwestern Yemeni city of Taez. The conflict has triggered what the U.N. describes as the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with three-quarters of the population, or 22 million people in need of humanitarian aid. (Ahmad Al-Basha/AFP/Getty Images)
Displaced Yemeni children from the Hodeidah province shelter in a damaged house on Sept. 30 where they have been living with other displaced families in the southwestern Yemeni city of Taez. The conflict has triggered what the U.N. describes as the world's worst humanitarian crisis, with three-quarters of the population, or 22 million people in need of humanitarian aid. (Ahmad Al-Basha/AFP/Getty Images)

A Week in World Photos

Christine Blasey Ford is sworn in before the Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington on Sept. 27. (Win McNamee/AP)
Christine Blasey Ford is sworn in before the Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington on Sept. 27. (Win McNamee/AP)

A Week in World Photos

Turkish Shiite women take part in a procession held for the religious holiday of Ashura in Istanbul on Sept. 20. Ashura marks the murder of Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammed killed while refusing the Caliph Yazid's right to rule the Islamic world. YASIN AKGUL/AFP/Getty Images
Turkish Shiite women take part in a procession held for the religious holiday of Ashura in Istanbul on Sept. 20. Ashura marks the murder of Imam Hussein, a grandson of the Prophet Mohammed killed while refusing the Caliph Yazid's right to rule the Islamic world. YASIN AKGUL/AFP/Getty Images

A Week in World Photos

Protesters clash with police during a demonstration against the agreement reached by Greece and Macedonia to resolve a dispute over the former Yugoslav republic's nam during the opening of the 83rd Thessaloniki International Fair in Thessaloniki on Sept. 8. ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images
Protesters clash with police during a demonstration against the agreement reached by Greece and Macedonia to resolve a dispute over the former Yugoslav republic's nam during the opening of the 83rd Thessaloniki International Fair in Thessaloniki on Sept. 8. ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images

A Week in World Photos

Indian Hindu devotees take a vow before forming a human pyramid in a bid to reach and break a dahi handi (curd pot) suspended in the air during celebrations for the Janmashtami festival, which marks the birth of Hindu God Lord Krishna, in Mumbai on Sept. 3. INDRANIL MUKHERJEE/AFP/Getty Images
Indian Hindu devotees take a vow before forming a human pyramid in a bid to reach and break a dahi handi (curd pot) suspended in the air during celebrations for the Janmashtami festival, which marks the birth of Hindu God Lord Krishna, in Mumbai on Sept. 3. INDRANIL MUKHERJEE/AFP/Getty Images

A Week in World Photos