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Activists remove and save art on fence near Black Lives Matter Plaza in D.C. January 30, 2021. Social activists remove and save art from Lafayette Square fencing near the White House on Saturday.
A White House fence’s Black Lives Matter art has been saved for ... More than 1,500 artifacts from the Black Lives Matter Memorial Fence were saved and are now accessible in the D.C. Public ...
The fence outside the White House has been converted to a crowd-sourced memorial wall — almost like an art gallery — to black men and women who lost their lives at the hands of police.
The fence outside the White House has been converted to a crowd-sourced memorial wall — almost like an art gallery — to black men and women who lost their lives at the hands of police.
The fence outside the White House has been converted to a crowd-sourced memorial wall — almost like an art gallery — to black men and women who lost their lives at the hands of police.
Nadine Seiler, one of those who watched over a fence at what became Black Lives Matter Plaza, is working to find homes for more than 700 artifacts that once covered the structure near the White House.
New White House fence, covered in protest art and signs, becomes pilgrimage site. (Brian Hopkins/ABC7) ...
WASHINGTON — His 11-year-old son wanted to protest, so Marcus Gould drove him to the nation’s capital to join the thousands of people decrying the police killing of George Floyd ...
Once reviled, the chain-link fence surrounding Lafayette Square and the White House is now seen as a bulletin board of art and artifacts dedicated to George Floyd and hope.
The fence outside the White House has been converted to a crowd-sourced memorial wall — almost like an art gallery — to black men and women who lost their lives at the hands of police.
Vivid plywood panels — created by Black, Indigenous, people of color (BIPOC) and white community artists — can be viewed for the next six months along the Arcata Ball Park fence at 888 F St.