Deborah Shapiro

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  • Don't Walk (West End Avenue)
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  • Walk (West End Avenue), under the scaffolding, past the stripped bicycle, through a shaft of light.
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  • Children in Halloween costumes on Broadway, Upper West Side, Manhattan
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  • Canceled during the pandemic, the iconic Thanksgiving Day Parade returned this year in an atmosphere of celebration and relief.
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  • Firefighters at a three-alarm residential fire on West 101st Street, May 7. They do not wear surgical or cloth masks while at a fire because they are flammable.
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  • Ramon, a doorman on West End Avenue, saluting front line workers of the pandemic on June 18, 2020. Every day at 7:00 PM, people applauded, played musical instruments, or banged on pots from their windows to show appreciation for nurses, doctors, and other front line workers. This photograph was shown in the exhibit ICP Concerned at the International Center for Photography.
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  • During lockdown in April the sirens echoed in the empty streets, day and night, every 10 minutes or so. Every siren represented another sick person struggling to breathe. Fear was palpable in the air.
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  • A beloved coffeeshop near Columbia University shut down during the lockdown.
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  • Michael, a tattoo artist unable to work during the lockdown, asked me to take his picture on Riverside Drive.
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  • Almost two years into the pandemic, the sudden outbreak of the Omicron variant of Covid-19 showed the lack of Covid testing in stark relief.
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  • What you need to be a pizza delivery guy during the pandemic: Mask, helmet, gloves, smartphone, electric bicycle, spare battery, two Kryptonite locks, pizza bag, and backpack. Most of these dangerous and low-paid jobs are held by undocumented workers on the front lines of the pandemic.
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  • A store selling cleaning products during the lockdown. These supplies became scarce when people feared that the coronavirus could be spread on surfaces.
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  • Japanese Maple tree in afternoon light, May 30, 2020
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  • On Election Day 2020, someone painted a pro-Trump message on a convenience store that shuttered during the pandemic. Any irony was unintended.
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  • Two girls playing in Central Park during the lockdown while their schools were closed.
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  • People waiting to enter a food store on Broadway and 110th Street in April. This sight was new and strange then, but the strange thing was how quickly social distancing became familiar.
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  • Firefighters saluting at the Firemen’s Memorial on the 20th anniversary of September 11
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  • 20 years after the terrorist attacks, firefighters remembered their fallen comrades who died at the World Trade Center on that day and in the years thereafter.
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  • Firefighters listening to the reading of the names of firefighters who died in the attack on the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001.
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  • The popular Metro Diner on Broadway had survived the decline of diners by renovating and making its menu more upscale, but it was closed and empty during the lockdown.
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  • A popular French bistro on Broadway used sidewalk bubbles and a shelter to serve diners outside while New York City restaurants remained closed for indoor dining.
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  • People waiting for early voting in Manhattan in the November 2020 election. The wait was as long as four hours.
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  • The Mexican Festival Restaurant, a neighborhood bar and restaurant on Broadway and 102nd Street known for both a mariachi band and opera singers, closed permanently due to the pandemic
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  • Rush hour on Broadway during lockdown, with no one exiting the subway station, no traffic, and only a solitary pedestrian and a pigeon.
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  • So many stores closed permanently during the pandemic, like this convenience store on Broadway. On Election Day 2020, someone sprayed "Vote Trump" on its red-painted shutter. Later it was tagged with a graffiti handle.
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  • On a spring Sunday during lockdown, few people ventured outside to the parks. This well-dressed woman on Riverside Drive wore a mask and gloves.
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  • Six feet apart: Social distancing on Broadway during the lockdown period in April 2020.
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  • Masks for sale on Broadway. Not all pedestrians were wearing them.
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  • On Saturday, November 7, 2020 as news of Joe Biden's victory in the presidential election broke, people poured into the streets of Manhattan in a joyous and spontaneous celebration.
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  • November 2020: even after the deaths of tens of thousands of New Yorkers in the pandemic, some were still in denial.
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