Item
We Are Brave. We Are Hopeful. We Are Resilient. We Are San Francisco.
Title (Dublin Core)
We Are Brave. We Are Hopeful. We Are Resilient. We Are San Francisco.
Description (Dublin Core)
This is a photograph of a piece of street art in San Francisco’s Hayes Valley. Stores across San Francisco closed their doors during the city's shelter-in-place orders that begin mid-March. Many stores boarded up their windows in response to shelter-in-place orders and because of looting that took place across Bay Area cities. Artists responded by creating beautiful murals on boarded up storefronts. This art piece was created by an owner of the restaurant Dobbs Ferry Of San Francisco, Lee Ann Frahm. Taken from the restaurant's instagram account, "When she decided to paint this, it was about finding a message that would connect with someone as they walked by... words can heal, they can make us smile, they can make us feel, they can make us laugh or cry, and they are powerful enough to stop us in our tracks and make us take one extra minute to breathe and appreciate who and where we are."
photograph: Matt Stein, art: Lee Ann Frahm
Date (Dublin Core)
Creator (Dublin Core)
Contributor (Dublin Core)
Event Identifier (Dublin Core)
Partner (Dublin Core)
Type (Dublin Core)
photograph
Link (Bibliographic Ontology)
Publisher (Dublin Core)
Instagram
Dobbs Ferry
Controlled Vocabulary (Dublin Core)
English
Food & Drink
English
Public Art
English
Cities & Suburbs
English
Neighborhoods
English
Emotion
Curator's Tags (Omeka Classic)
Contributor's Tags (a true folksonomy) (Friend of a Friend)
Collection (Dublin Core)
Linked Data (Dublin Core)
Date Submitted (Dublin Core)
06/30/2020
Date Modified (Dublin Core)
07/20/2020
11/16/2020
08/02/2022
10/08/2024
Date Created (Dublin Core)
05/12/2020
Linked resources
Filter by property
Title | Alternate label | Class |
---|---|---|
Shanna Gagnon Internship Portfolio | Linked Data | Interactive Resource |
This item was submitted on June 30, 2020 by Shanna Gagnon using the form “Share Your Story” on the site “A Journal of the Plague Year”: https://covid-19archive.org/s/archive
Click here to view the collected data.