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Indecline, stylized as INDECLINE, is an American art collective.. Members have said that the collective was formed in 2001 and is decentralized, with "dozens" of members in affiliated groups in several US states and a few foreign countries, [1] [2] and have characterized it as "[an] underground movement [of] activists, musicians, graffiti writers, [and] photographers". [3]
BANGKOK (Reuters) -Two Thai journalists have been arrested for their story about an activist spray painting an anarchist symbol and a symbol critical of "lese majeste" laws on a Bangkok temple ...
The Hillsborough County Registry of Deeds is located at 19 Temple Street in Nashua, one of the county seats of Hillsborough County, New Hampshire.The two-story brick building was built in 1901 as a courthouse and county office building to a design by Boston architect Daniel H. Woodbury, [2] and is a good example of Classical Revival architecture.
This opened up a division in thinking on anarchist art which is still apparent today, with some anarchist writers and artists advocating a view that art should be propagandistic and used to further the anarchist cause, and others that anarchism should free the artist from the requirements to serve a patron and master, allowing the artist to ...
Casey, Caitlin (2017). "Up against the Wall Motherfucker: Ideology and Action in a 'Street Gang with an Analysis'". In Goyens, Tom (ed.). Radical Gotham: Anarchism in New York City from Schwab's Saloon to Occupy Wall Street. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. pp. 161– 179. ISBN 978-0-252-08254-2. McMillian, Jon (June 5, 2005).
The French anarchist paper Le Drapeau Noir (The Black Flag), which printed its first issue in August 1883, [11] is one of the first published references to use black as an anarchist color. Black International was the name of a London -based British anarchist group founded in July 1881.
Frank Anderson House of 1907–1908 (90 Concord Street) William Niles House of 1907–1908 (8 Abbott Street) Commercial and public buildings: Greeley Block of 1833 and 1900 (13C-13D Clinton Street) Nashua & Lowell Freight House of c. 1853 (14-16 Railroad Square) Laton House Hotel of 1878–1881 (28 Railroad Square)
Gaia (born 1988 in New York City) is an American street artist who has received significant museum showings and critical recognition. [1] [2] Based in Baltimore, he has created large-scale murals worldwide to engage the community where he works in a dialogue by using historical and sociological references to these neighborhoods. [3]