
Articles
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Sep 20, 2024 |
news.nestia.com | Larry Buchanan |Nico Chilla |Francesca Paris
0:00 10-Minute Challenge: ‘Canopy’ We’d like you to look at one piece of art for 10 minutes, uninterrupted. By Larry Buchanan, Nico Chilla and Francesca Paris Sept. 19, 2024 Today, we bring you our third in a series of focuschallenges, in which we ask you to spend uninterrupted time looking at one piece of art. This time, we want you to look at a piece from Catherine Murphy, who began painting in the 1960s. This painting, called “Canopy,” is from 2020.
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Jul 31, 2024 |
nytimes.com | Larry Buchanan |Francesca Paris
"Interesting, then boring, then interesting again." - Stacey Morris"At first I didn't think I could do it. Around the three-minute mark I began to lose interest and my mind wanted to wander. I had to intentionally think of questions relating to the painting to keep my interest." - Christina Chaperon"Magical.
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Jul 1, 2024 |
newspub.live | Ana Ley |Larry Buchanan |Francesca Paris
Violent confrontations at a pro-Palestinian rally in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, on Saturday reflected what some local officials and protest organizers called an unexpectedly aggressive Police Department response, with officers flooding the neighborhood and using force against protesters. At the rally, which drew hundreds of demonstrators, at least two officers wearing the white shirts of commanders were filmed punching three protesters who were prone in the middle of a crosswalk.
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Jul 1, 2024 |
shorturl.at | Ana Ley |Larry Buchanan |Francesca Paris |Rebecca Lieberman
Today would have been the first Monday of New York City’s congestion pricing plan. Before it was halted by Gov. Kathy Hochul, the plan was designed to rein in some of the nation’s worst traffic while raising a billion dollars for the subway every year, one toll at a time. A year’s worth of tolls is hard to picture. But what about a day’s worth? What about an hour’s?
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Mar 3, 2024 |
pressnewsagency.org | Emily Badger |Larry Buchanan |DeSean McClinton-Holland
In New York Metropolis, trash has no devoted house all its personal. It suits, as an alternative, in plastic luggage squeezed into the in-between areas of town. It fills the gaps between buildings, the landings of stairwells, any obtainable turf between two mounted objects. Say, a parked automobile and a eating shed. Even towering piles of trash will be virtually invisible to inured New Yorkers.
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