Deborah Shapiro

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  • March 15, 2020 was the first day of lockdown in New York City. We all felt a sense of impending doom. Later we learned that thousands of lives could have been saved if the lockdown had begun two weeks earlier.
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  • Girls playing on Riverside Drive during lockdown, May 29, 2020
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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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  • Two men enjoying fresh oysters brought from Long Island during the lockdown. The bayman lost his business supplying restaurants and turned to individual customers to stay afloat.
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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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  • 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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  • Two girls playing in Central Park during the lockdown while their schools were closed.
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  • A woman finding solace in the beauty of a magnolia tree during the lockdown
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  • After gyms closed during lockdown, people found ways to exercise in the parks. This man did arm curls with a branch pruned from an apple tree in Riverside Park.
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  • A boy fishing in the Central Park Lake during the lockdown. With the boathouse shuttered, fishing was less successful because the fish no longer stayed near the edges of the lake to avoid the rowboats. Even the fish changed their behavior during the lockdown.
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  • On my first day out of self-isolation in the early days of the pandemic, I found a symbol of hope in this flowering tree in my neighborhood.
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  • Six feet apart: Social distancing on Broadway during the lockdown period in April 2020.
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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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  • 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 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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  • 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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