View allAll Photos Tagged EmmaGonzalez.
Emma Gonzalez's speech included a moment of silence which ended after 6 minutes and 20 seconds - the amount of time in which one gunman killed 17 schoolchildren and teachers. Her emotional speech completelly gripped the estimated 0.8 million people at the March For Our Lives Rally in Washington, D.C., on March 24, 2018.
The center photo was taken by "Mobilus in Mobil", who licensed the photo so that it may be reposted with attribution. I appreciate that he has allowed me to use his image in this montage. The original photo can be seen here:
www.flickr.com/photos/mobili/40309179334/
(This montage includes photos which were not captured precisely during Emma's speech. The image at upper right is mirror-inverted).
Emma's complete speech can be seen (on YouTube) here:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=u46HzTGVQhg
Another view of Emma during her speech:
Another artwork, this one by Serena May Illescas, with Emma Gonzalez in a mosaic of signs related to the growing movement against gun violence. Serena displayed the art on Facebook with the following text: "One bright spot in all the anger and frustration of current events is that it’s fertile soil for artists. I’ve been compelled for the first time in a long time to create work, and that’s due in no small part to being inspired by the passion and conviction of these emerging adults, particularly #EmmaGonzalez. Americans, call your senators and representatives. Donate. Make art and music and champion the people who are out there doing the damn thing." (Serena kindly allowed me to post this image with the license shown. If reposting must credit the artist).
Of the young activists, one exchange between these survivors and a spokesperson of a terrorist organization can be viewed here:
This watercolor is by Kimothy Joy, who says this about her work: "These kids, in the midst of their pain and trauma are speaking out with such conviction and courage. Speaking truth to power. Calling BS. Demanding to be heard. Demanding change and answers. They are the future. And they have mobilized, sparked a "NeverAgainmovement", organized "MarchForOurLives" and they’re just getting louder. I only wish I could paint them all, including the ones who are no longer with us."
Of the young activists, one exchange between these survivors and a pro-NRA politician can be viewed here:
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bcab2XkeKDQ
Thanks to Kimothy for kindly allowing me to post her work here with the license shown.
This is a poster designed by Michael Drake, which was released as an available poster to be used for the anti-gun-violence rally in Washington, D.C. planned for March 24, 2018.
Michael Drake also created another poster which simply has the text from part of one of Emma's famous speeches: "We are going to be the kids you read about in textbooks".
This portrait of Emma Gonzalez is by "sheringsnippets" and is one of 30 artworks of Emma featured in Latina magazine. The artist has declared the work to be in the public domain: "Save this image, share it, repost it, I want this spread like wildfire". Her illustration also includes this text: "I don't care what your affiliation is, but I think the fact that some people are waking up without a child or a sibling or a friend is an issue beyond politics. We need change...Gun reform needs to happen. No more thoughts. No more prayers. I stand with Emma Gonzalez."
(This image is cropped from the original to focus on the portrait).
Recuerdos, la idea inicial es el atardecer, la puesta de sol y quede para él recuerdo en primera persona de un día de playa en familia y lo romantico que fue este día y quede en nuestros recuerdos y compartamos los tres este recuerdo. en julio de 2.020
Atardecer en las Costas de la Luz de Huelva, Impresionante atardecer realizada en manual con telefonía móvil por José Luis Llagas. Reportajes Fotográficos para Huelva.
This was one of a handful of signs that showed support towards Emma Gonzalez, one of the surviving Stoneman Douglas High School students who survived the shooting and became a media sensation when her impassioned speech went viral. Emma has become an icon of the anti-gun violence movement, something she no doubt never wanted.
But Emma has her support from us here in L.A., as we gathered in Pershing Square Park.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic License.
Amanecer en Huelva. Sobre el rio Odiel, paseo Maritimo de Huelva a las 08:05 am de julio de 2.020 con una temperatura de 27º brisa marina de 2 nudos de velocidad.
Puesta de Sol en Huelva como un resplandor en el paseo maritimo de Huelva. Con una temperatura de 32º a las 9 de la noche. Costa de la LUz por el Sol que hay en Huelva y por ser la segunda provincia de Europa con más horas solares.
Heroes pictured on banner (seen in Washington D.C., September 21). The banner includes:
Row 1: 1 Maxine Waters, 2 Geraldine Ferraro, 3 Dolores Huerta, 4 Amy Klobuchar, 5 Tammy Duckworth.
Row 2: 1 Diane Feinstein, 2 Shirley Chisholm, 3 Hillary Clinton, 4 Michelle Obama, 5 Kamala Harris.
Row 3: 1 Emma Gonzalez, 2 Mazie Hirono, 3 Barbara Jordan, 4 Elizabeth Warren, 5 Rosemarie Aquilina.
Row 4: 1 Gloria Steinem, 2 Ruth Bader Ginsburg, 3 Tarana Burke, 4 Sonia Sotomayor, 5 Christine Blasey Ford.
(note: this image was edited to remove commercial advertising).
Emma González, is a high school senior. She survived the February 2018 Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland, Florida and co-founded the gun-control advocacy group Never Again MSD.
This caricature of Emma González is an original Photoshop painting.
On 24 March 2018 In DC and other cities, hundreds of thousands of students and others marched to demand common sense gun control in the wake of deadly school shootings in the U.S.
A portrait of Emma Gonzales by Jon Lion. Emma is a survivor of a school shooting, in which 17 students and teachers were killed on February 14, 2018. Emma has since become an anti-gun-violence activist, and her speeches are known for being fiery, passionate, and scathing. She has criticized lawmakers and President trump for receiving money from the NRA:
"If the President wants to ... tell me to my face that it was a terrible tragedy ... I'm going to happily ask him how much money he received from the National Rifle Association. ... Thirty million dollars. And divided by the number of gunshot victims in the United States in the one and one-half months in 2018 alone, that comes out to being $5,800. Is that how much these people are worth to you, trump?" — Emma Gonzalez
Also:
"The people in the government who are voted into power are lying to us ... And us kids seem to be the only ones who notice and are prepared to call B.S." — Emma Gonzalez
The artist, Jon Lion, has given me permission to post his artwork here with the license shown. A link to Jon's Facebook page is here:
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Reportaje fotográfico de José Luis Llagas, Reportaje sobre atardeceres en familia en pa playa de Huelva, Costa de la Luz. Punta Umbría.
La hora de recoger, y preparar la vuelta a casa, que casi nadie se le ocurre fotografiar, la recogida o la vuelta a casa.