#ArtInYourFeed 🎨 Polaroid of Keith Haring and Juan Dubose taken by Andy Warhol, June 2, 2024. Facebook. 4.5k likes and reactions. 64 comments. 619 shares.
❤️ There are so many things we could say about the amazing David Lynch, January 16, 2025. Instagram. 1.28k likes. 19 comments. 64 shares.
We ❤️ Museum Stores 🖌️🎨 Buy art-inspired gifts, art by local artists and artists in the PAFA community, tokens, books, puzzles, and more at our museum store, May 25, 2024. Instagram. 92 likes. 4 comments. 23 shares.
PAFA Happenings Newsletter sent January 31, 2025. 10,541 opens, 600 clicks.
PAFA Happenings Newsletter sent November 24, 2024. 10,793 opens, 548 clicks.
PAFA Happenings Newsletter sent November 4, 2024. 12,343 opens, 388 clicks.
As project manager for the launch of PAFA's digital guide on the Bloomberg Connects app, a free arts and culture platform developed by Bloomberg Philanthropies, I led the development and execution of the mobile guide, collaborating with internal teams and external partners to ensure a seamless integration. I oversaw the creation of engaging multimedia content, including audio tours and interactive maps, enhancing the visitor experience both on-site and off-site. This project marked a significant milestone for PAFA, allowing us to offer a dynamic and accessible way for audiences to connect with us in a new way. The guide is now available for free download on the App Store and Google Play, providing a new way for visitors to engage with PAFA and explore hundreds of cultural institutions worldwide.
COVID Chronicles Delaware is an initiative of the Delaware History Society, asking Delawareans to reflect on their experiences living through the COVID-19 pandemic and capture them through writing, art, image, or song. Submissions will become part of the permanent Delaware Historical Society digital collection to serve individually and collectively as primary sources for future generations.
The Boston Furniture Archive is a free, online resource for the study of Boston furniture. The Archive’s database provides catalog information and photographs of objects produced between 1630 and 1930 in Boston, Brookline, Cambridge, Charlestown, Dorchester, and Roxbury. In addition, the Archive offers basic information about furniture design and construction and links to related online resources.
Between 1910 and 1930, the African-American population of Philadelphia skyrocketed, from around 85,000 to nearly 220,000 in the early years of the Great Depression. This massive influx of southern newcomers had a deep and enduring impact on the city. The stories of the individuals—those who left lives behind in the South and ventured north in search of opportunity and equality, pushed out by the increasingly hostile environment of Jim Crow racism—reveal the true impact of this Great Migration north.
Captured in oral history interviews conducted in the 1980s with aging Philadelphians who participated in and witnessed the Great Migration firsthand, these stories tell of both individual lives and collective experiences adapting to a new home in the "City of Brotherly Love." Meet the narrators, hear their stories, and explore the experiences that united those who lived through this journey north.