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"interactive mural"
45 professional editorial images found
#13475392
20 Mar 2026
SHANGHAI, CHINA - MARCH 12: A large advertising mural at the Appliance and Electronics World Expo (AWE) 2026 at the Shanghai New International Expo Center (SNIEC) in Shanghai, China, on March 12, 2026.
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#13272982
4 Feb 2026
KRAKOW, POLAND – FEBRUARY 03: A mixed-media street artwork combining a plaster bust with a saint-like appearance and a pop-art mural, featuring an interactive QR code, is seen on a city wall in Krakow, Poland, on February 3, 2026.
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#12297806
24 Apr 2025
A woman uses her phone while standing in front of a painted public book exchange styled as a bookshelf in Regensburg, Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, Germany, on April 19, 2025. The creatively repurposed telephone booth promotes open-access literature and community sharing in a quiet green courtyard.
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#11551949
7 Sep 2024
A new interactive mural of deported veterans, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' is at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall on the Tijuana, Mexico side of the US-Mexico Border on September 6, 2024. Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, creates the work to commemorate 16 war veterans who, after serving in the United States Army, are expelled from the country. The mural depicts the stories of veterans from different countries, such as Mexico, Guatemala, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica, among others, who, after fighting on behalf of the United States, face deportation.
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#11551950
7 Sep 2024
A new interactive mural of deported veterans, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' is at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall on the Tijuana, Mexico side of the US-Mexico Border on September 6, 2024. Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, creates the work to commemorate 16 war veterans who, after serving in the United States Army, are expelled from the country. The mural depicts the stories of veterans from different countries, such as Mexico, Guatemala, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica, among others, who, after fighting on behalf of the United States, face deportation.
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#11551952
7 Sep 2024
A new interactive mural of deported veterans, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' is at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall on the Tijuana, Mexico side of the US-Mexico Border on September 6, 2024. This mural is part of a larger project by Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, in collaboration with Humanizing Deportation, to document and make visible the stories of deported people. The mural installation in Tijuana is the third in a series that seeks to show the faces and experiences of deportees. Two additional murals are scheduled to open in New York and California in 2025. To offer greater reach to the stories, a QR code is placed next to the mural that allows access to the testimonies of the deported veterans in audiovisual format.
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#11551956
7 Sep 2024
A new interactive mural of deported veterans, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' is at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall on the Tijuana, Mexico side of the US-Mexico Border on September 6, 2024. The work, created by Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, commemorates 16 war veterans who, after serving in the United States Army, were expelled from the country. The mural depicts the stories of veterans from different countries, such as Mexico, Guatemala, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica, among others, who, after fighting on behalf of the United States, face deportation. This mural is part of a larger project by Santana, in collaboration with Humanizing Deportation, to document and make visible the stories of deported people. The mural installation in Tijuana is the third in a series that seeks to show the faces and experiences of deportees. Two additional murals are scheduled to open in New York and California in 2025. To offer greater reach to the stories, a QR code is placed next to the mural that allows access to the testimonies of the deported veterans in audiovisual format.
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#11551957
7 Sep 2024
A new interactive mural of deported veterans, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' is at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall on the Tijuana, Mexico side of the US-Mexico Border on September 6, 2024. The work, created by Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, commemorates 16 war veterans who, after serving in the United States Army, were expelled from the country. The mural depicts the stories of veterans from different countries, such as Mexico, Guatemala, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica, among others, who, after fighting on behalf of the United States, face deportation. This mural is part of a larger project by Santana, in collaboration with Humanizing Deportation, to document and make visible the stories of deported people. The mural installation in Tijuana is the third in a series that seeks to show the faces and experiences of deportees. Two additional murals are scheduled to open in New York and California in 2025. To offer greater reach to the stories, a QR code is placed next to the mural that allows access to the testimonies of the deported veterans in audiovisual format.
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#11551958
7 Sep 2024
A new interactive mural of deported veterans, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' is at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall on the Tijuana, Mexico side of the US-Mexico Border on September 6, 2024. This mural is part of a larger project by Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, in collaboration with Humanizing Deportation, to document and make visible the stories of deported people. The mural installation in Tijuana is the third in a series that seeks to show the faces and experiences of deportees. Two additional murals are scheduled to open in New York and California in 2025. To offer greater reach to the stories, a QR code is placed next to the mural that allows access to the testimonies of the deported veterans in audiovisual format.
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#11551951
7 Sep 2024
Two tourists take a selfie while posing near a new interactive mural of deported veterans at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' on the Tijuana, Mexico side of the US-Mexico Border on September 6, 2024. The work, created by Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, commemorates 16 war veterans who, after serving in the United States Army, are expelled from the country. The mural depicts the stories of veterans from different countries, such as Mexico, Guatemala, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica, among others, who, after fighting on behalf of the United States, face deportation.
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#11551953
7 Sep 2024
Members of the Mexican National Guard patrol near a new interactive mural of deported veterans at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' on the Tijuana, Mexico side of the US-Mexico Border on September 6, 2024. This mural is part of a larger project by Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, in collaboration with Humanizing Deportation, to document and make visible the stories of deported people. The mural installation in Tijuana is the third in a series that seeks to show the faces and experiences of deportees. Two additional murals are scheduled to open in New York and California in 2025. To offer greater reach to the stories, a QR code is placed next to the mural that allows access to the testimonies of the deported veterans in audiovisual format.
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#11551954
7 Sep 2024
A man looks at a new interactive mural of deported veterans at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' in Tijuana, Mexico, on September 6, 2024. This mural is part of a larger project by Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, in collaboration with Humanizing Deportation, to document and make visible the stories of deported people. The mural installation in Tijuana is the third in a series that seeks to show the faces and experiences of deportees. Two additional murals are scheduled to open in New York and California in 2025. To offer greater reach to the stories, a QR code is placed next to the mural that allows access to the testimonies of the deported veterans in audiovisual format.
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#11551955
7 Sep 2024
A man takes pictures with his cell phone of a new interactive mural of deported veterans at the Playas de Tijuana beach border wall, ''The Deported Veterans Diaspora,'' in Tijuana, Mexico, on September 6, 2024. The work, created by Lizbeth De La Cruz Santana, an assistant professor in the department of Black and Latino Studies at Baruch College in New York City, commemorates 16 war veterans who, after serving in the United States Army, are expelled from the country. The mural depicts the stories of veterans from different countries, such as Mexico, Guatemala, Haiti, the Dominican Republic, and Jamaica, among others, who, after fighting on behalf of the United States, face deportation.
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#11115192
2 Apr 2024
Visitors are creating shapes and text on a Lego-style construction blocks joint mural at the SK Telecom pavilion during the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona, Spain, on April 2, 2024.
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#11115193
2 Apr 2024
A woman is building a heart with Lego-style construction blocks beneath a robot face on a joint mural at SK Telecom's pavilion, where visitors are creating shapes and text at the Mobile World Congress 2024 in Barcelona, Spain, on April 2, 2024.
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#11115194
2 Apr 2024
A woman is building a heart with Lego-style construction blocks beneath a robot face on a joint mural at SK Telecom's pavilion, where visitors are creating shapes and text at the Mobile World Congress 2024 in Barcelona, Spain, on April 2, 2024.
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