View allAll Photos Tagged Latinx

Dotty's Secret - Festival Glam Collection - Glossy Eyeshadow [Pack 1] @ the Arcade

 

Moccino - Yara Skin (Brownie)

 

Moccino - Babylon v2 Lipstick

 

Mura Beauty - Marwa Ponytail

 

Bjorn - Creole Hoop Earrings

Manhattan, NYC Protest Annual Rent Guideline Board Meeting

Make The Road Protesters- LatinX Adults & Kids-

Large painting in Latinx Art Exhibit in the Houston Holocaust Museum. Texas. Aug. 2021.

LOVELY LATINX LAD !

photographed by ADDA DADA

SANTA SKIVVIES RUN 2021 !

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ADDA DADA's VIEW COUNT is :

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•🔹•THANK YOU for visiting my virtual art gallery! Enjoy my original 'social documentary' photographs of various events !

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•🔹• ADDA DADA's photography presents a variety of adults (18+ years old) at different public events . These photographs do NOT imply the person's sexual orientation in any way. Everyone was asked and they consented to be photographed and posted

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Representatives from LatinxEd met with PCC President Lawrence Rouse and members of his President's Leadership Team on June 28 before holding discussions later in the day with Pitt faculty members and officials from the Association of Mexicans in North Carolina. The meetings were part of the non-profit group's statewide 'listening tour' that began in the fall.

All-American Latinx family...

Daly City, California, July 2020

The image captures latinx students playing soccer together. As a latinx UT student myself, I can affirm that a predominant portion of male latinx students play soccer through intramural sports or simply leisure. The latinx community on campus is very close knit, using soccer as a time to come together through activity, competition, and fun.

Get your Huitlacoche Here

The College of Education's building is named after George I. Sanchez, a Latinx pioneer in American educational scholarship and civil rights activism. This building sign honors the incredible contributions of a Latinx scholar, though there is not much commemoration of others on campus.

 

Rachel Branson Barham - rb42245

I came on this event one morning in Central Havana. A clown, a comedian and teams of costumed girls performing salsa to loud music, cheered on by all their friends, teachers, parents and fans.

Havana, Cuba, April, 2015

 

Only the street shots - thestreetzine.blogspot.com/

Latin art exhibit at the Holocaust Museum in Houston, Texas. Aug 2021.

 

"La Mujer de Maiz" by Tina Hernandez, 2020. Photo ink-jet print in a vintage frame with a corn husk border.

 

Listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2019, the Church of the Epiphany was constructed in 1888. The church is the site of an important local movement center in the Chicano Civil Rights Movement. The church was the site of organization for the Latinx community of East Los Angeles during a time when Latinx mobilized to demand full civic and political inclusion. Under the guidance of Reverend John B. Luce, the church became a center for cultural heritage preservation, reflecting the intersection of religion and activism associated with the use of religion and non-violence to promote Chicano civil rights during the 1960s and 1970s. Architecturally the church is an excellent and intact example of the ecclesiastical architecture of Ernest A. Coxhead and Arthur B. Benton for the Episcopal Archdiocese of Los Angeles.

 

The first period of significance for the church is from 1888 to 1920, and encompasses construction, significant additions, and the installation of the organ and all parishioner-donated stained-glass windows. The second period of significance spans from 1965 to 1972, representing the tenure of Father John Luce as rector and the major milestones of the Chicano Civil Rights Movement. The church is also recognized as the Los Angeles base for Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers; the location of organizational efforts for the Blowouts, the Chicano Moratorium, the Brown Berets, and Latinx support for the election of Robert F. Kennedy; and the location of the founding of the community newspaper La Raza. Overall, the Church of the Epiphany has exceptional social history in the work and lives of the California Hispanic community. The Church of the Epiphany is a rare, extant example of a building associated with the support of Latino activism and civil rights during the mid to late twentieth century.

 

Los Angeles, California

Listed 2020

Reference Number: 100004857

Listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 2019, the Church of the Epiphany was constructed in 1888. The church is the site of an important local movement center in the Chicano Civil Rights Movement. The church was the site of organization for the Latinx community of East Los Angeles during a time when Latinx mobilized to demand full civic and political inclusion. Under the guidance of Reverend John B. Luce, the church became a center for cultural heritage preservation, reflecting the intersection of religion and activism associated with the use of religion and non-violence to promote Chicano civil rights during the 1960s and 1970s. Architecturally the church is an excellent and intact example of the ecclesiastical architecture of Ernest A. Coxhead and Arthur B. Benton for the Episcopal Archdiocese of Los Angeles.

 

The first period of significance for the church is from 1888 to 1920, and encompasses construction, significant additions, and the installation of the organ and all parishioner-donated stained-glass windows. The second period of significance spans from 1965 to 1972, representing the tenure of Father John Luce as rector and the major milestones of the Chicano Civil Rights Movement. The church is also recognized as the Los Angeles base for Cesar Chavez and the United Farm Workers; the location of organizational efforts for the Blowouts, the Chicano Moratorium, the Brown Berets, and Latinx support for the election of Robert F. Kennedy; and the location of the founding of the community newspaper La Raza. Overall, the Church of the Epiphany has exceptional social history in the work and lives of the California Hispanic community. The Church of the Epiphany is a rare, extant example of a building associated with the support of Latino activism and civil rights during the mid to late twentieth century.

 

National Register of Historic Places Homepage

 

Church of the Epiphany

 

National Register of Historic Places on Facebook

Art exhibit at the Houston Holocaust Museum. Aug. 2021

This photo is a promotion for the Latinx Theatre Initiative in the Fine Arts department. This group is dedicated to creating theatre and telling stories of the Latinx community. Their biography on their instagram @latinxut is "We are a Latinx-focused theatre group at UT Austin open to all students of the university." This shows students within the community that are taking initiative and filling where they believe is a gap in representation.

Photo by Miguel Sanchez-Nunez

Students celebrated TGIF and Latinx Heritage Month with music from popular Latinx artists.

 

Photo by John Seyfried

A grand opening for the Latinx & Spanish Language Hub was held on September 21, 2022, in Coleman Hall on the campus of Eastern Illinois University. (Abbey Marsmaker)

Photo by Miguel Sanchez-Nunez

IVC Celebrated Latinx Heritage Month Celebration on Wednesday, September 28 from 11 am - 2 pm at the SSC Quad. Festivities included paletas with the president, poetry reading, booths of different resources, as well as Aztec dancers.

Christopher Marin (center) and fellow students are celebrated during the Latinx graduation celebration in the Laxson Auditorium on Saturday, May 19, 2018 in Chico, Calif.

(Jessica Bartlett /University Photographer/CSU Chico)

  

Graduating students are honored during their 46th Annual Latinx Graduation Celebration (LGC) on Saturday, May 20, 2023 in Chico, Calif. The Latinx Graduation Celebration was created to honor the achievement of Latinx graduates, and the contributions their families and friends have made during their education. Movimiento Estudiantil Chicanx de Aztlán (MEChA) created this event in 1978 to encourage Latinos to pursue higher education. This diverse and intimate English/Spanish-bilingual ceremony has flourished, and now includes Latinx and non-Latinx students.

(Jason Halley/University Photographer/Chico State)

The Latinx Social was held on September 8, 2022, on the Library Quad of Eastern Illinois University. (Abbey Marsmaker)

On Monday, September 19, 2022 President Cindy Jebb and the Office of Equity, Diversity, Inclusion and Compliance (EDIC) held the opening proclamation for Latinx Heritage Month at the Ramapo College Arch. LatinX Heritage Month pays tribute to the generations of LatinX Americans who have positively influenced and enriched our nation and society.

Latinx Alumni & Student Community Coffee & Strategic Planning. Photographed at Gregory 175 on Saturday, October 22, 2022, by Coco McKown.

On Thursday, September 22, 2022 students were invited by EDIC and the Library to The Learning Commons for free Crowley's Cupcakes in celebration of Latinx Heritage Month.

A live concert was held on the patio of Harvey House aka Spanish House in honor of Latinx Heritage Month.

 

Photo by Jonathan Clark '25

On Thursday, September 22, 2022 students were invited by EDIC and the Library to The Learning Commons for free Crowley's Cupcakes in celebration of Latinx Heritage Month.

London Latinx community gather in Vauxhall for Orlando vigil

To see the all the photos, please visit flic.kr/s/aHsmDZJraA

 

The first meeting of the Latinx/Hispanos Unidos student organization on April 3, 2019.

Latinx graduation celebration by El Centro Académico Cultural

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