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Gill published her paintings in the award-winning book, "Site Lines: Lost New York, 1954-2022." As a lifelong New Yorker, artist Jill Gill, 91, has watched the city's famous streets transform ...
March 2010 marked the 50th anniversary of the union’s formation, the beginning of its remarkable growth and extraordinary ...
From my front porch in Sunset Park, I could see the New York ... now almost entirely empty, with few reminders of its past. What was once a community has been destroyed twice: first by the storm ...
Construction workers above New York City skyline ... 1962 and now defines the cityscape. Seattle has endured its fair share of economic booms and busts—first in logging and mining, then in ...
New York NOW is available to stream on pbs.org and the ... we came in with the fiscal crisis. So New York City was on the verge of going bankrupt. The State Urban Development Corporation was ...
Now, New Yorkers are slowly ... it’s long overdue for New York City to catch up. “You see plastic bags open with the food just rotting and stinking and then it leaking out over the sidewalk ...
The answers are now online, in a then-and-now project that pairs paintings of long-ago New York City street scenes with photographs taken from where the artists had stood with their easels and ...
But then his grin fades ... Closed to visitors since 2020, it has been taken over by New York City and is now the main intake facility for migrants. On the upper floors every room is full ...
Gill's award-winning book, "Site Lines: Lost New York, 1954-2022," features the watercolor streetscape paintings she created to preserve nearly 70 years' worth of New York City's history.
Major US city skylines in photos, then and now Construction workers above New York City skyline with Singer Building circa 1925 in background and cropped view of One World Trade Center and high rises.