Cowgirls are God's Wildest Angels They Have Cowboy Hats for Halos and Horses for Wings Poster

 

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Cowgirls are God's Wildest Angels They Have Cowboy Hats for Halos and Horses for Wings Poster

  • “Lockdown Emotions” was created by Faith Crocker, a 15-year-old student at Eastside High School in Lancaster to express his feelings during distance learning. (Photo courtesy of Faith Crocker)

  • This pen drawing is by Brenna Corcoran, 17, a senior in the Visual Arts Conservatory at the California School of the Arts – San Gabriel Valley. Brenna was inspired by “Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and George Floyd’s murder, the continuation of a global pandemic, the beginnings of a pivotal election, and the pressures of school.” (Photo courtesy of Julia Gutierrez) Cowgirls are God's Wildest Angels They Have Cowboy Hats for Halos and Horses for Wings Poster

  • Italy White, a senior at Vista del Lago High School in Moreno Valley, submitted this piece for Moreno Valley Unified School District’s artful healing initiative. “If I was given a chance to go back to that fateful day, I would’ve done things differently. I would’ve shared a more meaningful goodbye with my friends,” Italy said. “I also wouldn’t have treated COVID-19 as a joke and rooted for an extra week of Spring Break.” (Photo courtesy of Anahi Velasco)

  • Mathew Banagudos, a senior at Vista del Lago High School in Moreno Vally submitted this piece as part of the Moreno Valley Unified School District’s artful healing initiative. “The work represented the thoughts and events going through quarantine and transitioning into senior year during quarantine, knowing our senior year isn’t going to be the same as the others,” Matthew said. (Photo courtesy of Anahi Velasco)

  • Mixed media (paint and paper on a birch panel) self-portrait collage by Ciel Mitrovich, a freshman at Orange County School of the Arts in Santa Ana. This was a self-motivated summer project to help students find creativity during the pandemic and isolation at home, her teacher says. (Photo courtesy of Paige Oden)

  • A digital drawing by Daria Kosianenko, a sophomore at Fairmont Preparatory Academy in Anaheim, who is living in Moscow, Russia due to the pandemic. The drawing, “Waiting in the Shadows,” shows the COVID-19 virus in the form of a horse hiding its true face before revealing her essence, responsible for the death of thousands. A bell hangs in her ear as a warning, but not everyone wants to listen to its sound. For Daria, this work and the situation that we all experienced means the word: despair. (Photo courtesy of Heather Soodak)


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