Not exact matches
What I saw was a
crowd of (alert) happy
people, actively engaging with gallery directors and artists, taking
photographs and buying art.
Conceptual artist Hank Willis Thomas will recreate a city block with a series
of 1:1 scale
photographs of North Philadelphia's
people and buildings, installed in the galleries
of the PPAC, inviting audiences to consider issues related to gentrification, and setting the stage for public forums and a
crowd - sourced neighborhood image archive and exhibition.
This
photograph of Martin Luther King, Jr., shows him waving to the
crowd of more than 200,000
people gathered on the Mall during the March on Washington, after delivering his «I Have A Dream» speech.
To the best
of my knowledge in Italy you need permission to take a picture
of a
person if the presence
of someone materially impacts the image - for instance if you are
photographing someone sleeping on the bench, and if they weren't there it is only a bench; then you need that
persons permission, but if it is a
crowd scene then it doesn't matter if one
person is there or not - so you don't need permission.