Kennard was born in Budapest, Hungary to Joir and Catherina Weisz, moving to the UK at the age of 15 with her family in the face of growing antisemitism in Hungary. In the UK she was educated at Hove County School for Girls and Prince Henry VIII Grammar School, Evesham. She attended Newnham College Cambridge, studying Natural Sciences at a time when women did not formally receive a degree. She went on to gain an MA in 1948 and DSc in 1973
Career
Following her studies, Kennard worked as a Research assistant at the Cavendish Laboratory, Cambridge from 1944–48, working with Max Perutz on the structure of hemoglobin. After this she moved to London, working at the Medical Research Council RC Vision Research Unit from 1948-1951. In this role she studied rhodopsin and vitamin A with Hamilton Hartridge. Subsequently, she was a research assistant, establishing a crystallographic lab at the MRC National Institute for Medical Research. In 1961 Kennard returned to work in Cambridge to the University's chemistry department to set up Crystallography Unit. She remained in this department until retirement. During her career she has produced over 200 scientific papers and written several books. Kennard is best known as a founder of the Cambridge Structural Database and first director of the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre. The resource was borne of her belief that "collective use of data would lead to the discovery of new knowledge which transcends the results of individual experiments". Kennard held an MRC special appointment from 1974-1989 and was Visiting Professor at the University of London from 1988-1990.
Honours and awards
She was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 1987 and awarded the OBE "For services to Scientific Research on the Structure of Biological Molecules" in 1988. In recognition of her work, there is the Olga Kennard Research Fellowship in crystallography, administered by the Royal Society. In 1993 she was elected a member of the Academia Europaea. In 2003 the University of Cambridge made her a Doctor of Lawhonoris causa. In 2020, the IUCr awarded Dr Kennard the 12thEwald Prize for her "invaluable pioneering contribution to the development of crystallographic databases".
Personal life
She is married to Sir Arnold Burgen, her second husband; her first husband was David Kennard, to whom she was married from 1948-1961 having two daughters. After retirement, Kennard was appointed as a trustee of the British Museum in 2004, a position held until 2012. She is an 'architecture aficionado' and lives in a Grade II listed house designed by Danish architect, Erik Sorensen. The National Portrait Gallery holds her portrait. Her niece is English actress Rachel Weisz.