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Showing results for "Black White Figure"

Dozens of identical Santa Claus figures wearing black face masks stand in neat military-like rows against a deep burgundy backdrop in Portland's Westmoreland neighborhood. The installation by artist Chris Willis transforms the jolly holiday icon into a haunting commentary on pandemic-era isolation, with warm amber lighting casting shadows across the mass-produced faces. Each figure maintains the classic red suit and white beard while the stark black masks create an unsettling uniformity that speaks to collective experience during COVID-19.
Chris Willis' "Santa Clones" installation features masked holiday figures in Portland's Westmoreland district, reflecting pandemic-era themes of isolation and collective experience.
Masked Santa Army in Portland Westmoreland
B
A motion-blurred pedestrian carrying a blue bag walks briskly along a wet sidewalk in Portland, Oregon, past a large-scale graffiti mural by artist Uter. The mural spans two building surfaces and features bold black-and-white surrealist imagery including a hooded figure, a cartoon bear character in yellow and pink, a stylized letter form with a rabbit inside, and circular emblems with illustrated faces. A parked white truck is partially visible on the right.
A pedestrian passes a mural by Portland street artist Uter.
Passing Through
B
Two stark black and white stickers bearing "RIOT COP" headlines are affixed to weathered particle board covering a storefront window. The left sticker features a sketched figure of an armored officer, while the right declares "IF YOUR NOT AGAINST US YOUR WITH US" in hand-lettered text. Red spray paint marks streak across the textured wood surface, creating a raw urban canvas that speaks to Portland's turbulent protest era.
Political stickers adorn boarded windows on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland, Oregon, reflecting the city's recent civil unrest.
Riot Cop Stickers on Boarded Storefront
B
A vibrant community mural adorns the boarded windows of a closed business on Southeast Hawthorne Boulevard in Portland's Richmond neighborhood. The artwork features two portrait figures flanking a central mandala design with the message 'YOU ME WE' prominently displayed, transforming urban decay into a canvas for connection and hope. The red brick facade creates a striking backdrop against the overcast Pacific Northwest sky, while street signs and utility poles frame this intersection of abandonment and artistic resilience.
A colorful mural proclaiming unity covers the boarded storefront of a shuttered business in Portland's Richmond district.
Unity Mural on Shuttered Richmond Storefront
B
A weathered brick doorway on Northeast Alberta Street becomes a canvas for spiritual street art, where vibrant murals blend Eastern and Western iconography. The composition features a serpentine green dragon coiling around ornate golden lettering, while a radiant Om symbol bursts with pink and blue energy against the dark entrance. Below, a contemplative figure in black and white observes the sacred display, creating a meditation on urban spirituality in Portland's Concordia neighborhood.
Mystical street art transforms a doorway entrance in Portland's Alberta Arts District, blending serpentine imagery with spiritual symbols.
Sacred Symbols Adorn Alberta Street Doorway
B
Four photocopied flyers create a makeshift gallery on weathered olive-green wood in Portland's Concordia neighborhood. The black and white prints capture pandemic zeitgeist through humor and hope: a smiling teacher from a Polaroid labeled "LA TEACHER," silhouettes maintaining distance under "STAYING APART ALWAYS TOGETHER," a cartoon astronaut proclaiming "DON'T PANIC," and "EL POST MAN" featuring a postal worker and truck. The grassroots display transforms ordinary street surface into community commentary during COVID-19 lockdown.
Community-created pandemic street art adorns a green wall in Portland's Concordia neighborhood, blending humor and solidarity during COVID-19 lockdown restrictions.
Pandemic Street Art in Portland's Concordia
B
Rows of miniature Santa Claus figurines, each wearing black face masks, create a surreal holiday tableau behind the windows of a Sellwood-Moreland storefront in Portland, Oregon. The amber glow from interior lighting bathes the countless Santa clones in warm light, their red suits and white beards creating a sea of festive repetition. City lights twinkle through the glass, reflecting off the polished surface below the display, while the masked faces transform this traditional Christmas imagery into a poignant commentary on pandemic-era celebrations.
Chris Willis' 'Santa Clones' installation features hundreds of masked Santa figurines displayed in a Portland storefront window, reflecting holiday traditions adapted for the COVID-19 era.
Masked Santa Army in Portland Storefront
B
A contemplative woman in a wide-brimmed hat pauses at the edge of Madison Square Park's bustling outdoor dining area, her shadow stretching across sun-warmed concrete. The Empire State Building rises majestically in the background, its Art Deco spire piercing overcast skies, while the historic Porcelanosa building and contemporary high-rises create Manhattan's signature architectural layering. The scene captures the gentle rhythm of urban life, where nature and commerce intersect in temporary harmony beneath market umbrellas and flowering planters.
A moment of urban contemplation unfolds in the Flatiron District's Madison Square Park, where the Empire State Building towers over afternoon diners and a solitary figure in thoughtful pause.
Midday Reverie in Flatiron's Urban Oasis
B
Artist Anke Gladnick climbs a red aluminum ladder to reach the upper portions of her vibrant mural "Let's Talk" on the exterior wall of Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood. The work-in-progress reveals her signature style of layered analog and digital elements, featuring flowing turquoise forms, geometric constellations of yellow dots, coral-pink star bursts, and a serene female figure with dark curls holding what appears to be a green water vessel. Gladnick, dressed in a black puffer jacket and jeans, stretches upward with concentrated focus, embodying the physical dedication required to transform architectural surfaces into dreamlike narratives.
Illustrator Anke Gladnick works on her commissioned mural "Let's Talk" at Open Signal in Portland's Eliot neighborhood, climbing toward the constellation-like elements that characterize her surreal, layered artistic style.
Muralist Ascending Toward Her Vision
C

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