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"Worry": Digital collage. |
Want music?
Click : Naoki Sugi, How Deep Is Your Love
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ari Ward, “Mass Action” (2016). Lexington, Kentucky.
Popping up in different corners of the United States from rural areas to urban centers, the works tackle a multitude of societal challenges and humanitarian crises that require urgency and advocacy. In contrast to a billboard’s usual profit-driven, commercial function, the large-scale structures instead become poignant messages in line with For Freedoms’ overall mission. By spotlighting short but compelling phrases, powerful imagery, and clever placement, the public installations act as a force for widespread movement. |
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Christine Sun Kim, “Words Shape Reality” (2018). Jefferson City, Missouri. |
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Hank Willis Thomas, “Who Taught You To Love?” (2020). Des Moines, Iowa |
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Robinson and the Visiting Room Project, “I’ve Been Here All My Life” (2022). Detroit, Michigan. |
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Hank Willis Thomas, Emily Shur, Eric Gottesman, and Wyatt Gallery, “Let Love Quiet Fear” (2020). Atlanta, Georgia. |
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Emily Hanako Momohara, “Family Incarceration: Never Again is Now” (2018). Nampa, Idaho. |
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Jamila El Sahili, “Human Being” (2018). Lansing, Michigan. |
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Justin Brice Guariglia, “We Are The Asteroid” (2018). Oklahoma City, Oklahoma |
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Hank Willis Thomas, “All Lives Matter” (2018). St. Louis, Missouri. |
A 4 minute video, Nicholas Lee, Ceramics, here
Just because ...
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scale-crested pygmy tyrant |
Friday's Smiles ...
3 comments:
These billboards for freedom are brilliant!
Have a fine weekend, Jacki!
Thanks Eleanor so many creative people out there have a wonderful weekend.
I wasn't paying attention to their new format, so Anonymous below, is me. ;o)
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