Sat_K_3_sun (1).jpg

I can see that everything in this world has a connection with each other, but family and love are the things that I am the most connected to.

Kolabphana Sat, Siem Reap, Cambodia

Bader-Gregory_E_02_Homecoming.jpg

In this overgrowth of puffball dandelions, students scrambled by, shoulder to shoulder, trying to beat passing time.

Now my footsteps are slow and methodical - getting nowhere quickly - listening for the intercom.

Elle Bader-Gregory, Buffalo, New York

DSC_0720 Burd.jpg

Even during quarantine people still ‏ went to the beach and now after quarantine people act like everything is normal, coming to the beach but with masks.

פז בורד

Paz Burd
Tel Aviv, Israel

Francisco-Juan Growth.jpg

The world is full of growth. How have you grown during the lockdown?

Ovidio Francisco-Juan, Portland, Oregon

Ly Lada Sellers2.jpg

This picture just remind the story of my friend in her very young age. In that time her family was poor and don't have enough money for spending. Her family went out to find food and some vegetables and meet like bamboo, fish, snail, shrimp for sell. She is the only one in her family who good at selling. She put the basket that full of things on her head and go out for sell.

Ly Lada, Siem Reap, Cambodia

Woodford Story Exchange2.jpg

Finding someone who sees you, who you see. It can help illuminate your surroundings, blurring out the harshness, taking you to a dreamland, almost. But dreamlands are not not real, tangible, solid; they can't be built upon. As much as escapes may be needed, substance is found where we are now. Substance is initials carved into wood, eventually left to be claimed by nature. Permanent, but left alone, there to be cherished and remembered, there to revisit. A real world artifact of a dream.

Peter Woodford, Portland, Oregon

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Warmth and Plurality • Curated by Sam Levine

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Moving Images • Curated by Brendan Bannon