@SFOMuseum Twitter Posts Tagged stanleygreene This is SFO Museum's archive of the @SFOMuseum Twitter account. There are 8 posts . See all the tags or all the Twitter posts that have been archived so far.
”Shadows of Change“ by #StanleyGreene, is on display, post security in Terminal 3 by Gate F5. See it online: https://t.co/dOV32NMpxu #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on March 20, 2020.
#StanleyGreene chronicles changes in Uummannaq in a series of quiet images that portray a landscape and its people in flux, and offer a place for us to meditate on a future where the effects of climate will only become more visible. #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on March 20, 2020.
In his essay, “Shadows of Change”, late photographer and photojournalist #StanleyGreene visits the town of Uummannaq in central-western Greenland and draws focus on the effects of climate change in the region. #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on March 20, 2020.
“In the Inuit language, we use the word Sila for ice. But Sila also means much more than Ice. It means weather, climate, environment, sky, and indeed, the universe.” —Aqqaluk Lynge, former President of the Inuit Circumpolar Council #StanleyGreene #MuseumFromHome
This tweet was posted on March 20, 2020.
See ”Shadows of Change“ by #StanleyGreene, on display, post security in Terminal 3 by Gate F5. https://t.co/dOV32NMpxu
This tweet was posted on February 07, 2020.
#StanleyGreene chronicles changes in Uummannaq in a series of quiet images that portray a landscape and its people in flux, and offer a place for us to meditate on a future where the effects of climate will only become more visible.
This tweet was posted on February 07, 2020.
In his essay, “Shadows of Change”, late photographer and photojournalist #StanleyGreene visits the town of Uummannaq in central-western Greenland and draws focus on the effects of climate change in the region.
This tweet was posted on February 07, 2020.
“In the Inuit language, we use the word Sila for ice. But Sila also means much more than Ice. It means weather, climate, environment, sky, and indeed, the universe.” —Aqqaluk Lynge, former President of the Inuit Circumpolar Council #StanleyGreene
This tweet was posted on February 07, 2020.







