Public Project
Tribeca in the Time of Coronavirus
Copyright Donna Ferrato 2024
Updated Jun 2020
Location Tribeca, NYC
Topics Action, Activism, Adolescence, Aging, Architecture, Belief, Black Lives Matter, Children, Civil Rights, Confrontation, Curfew, Dogs, Editorial, Emotion, Environment, Epidemics, Family, Food, Freedom, Graffiti, Health/Healing, Historical, Hope, Human Rights, Isolation, Joy, Leadership, Lifestyle, Love, Mixed Medium, Multimedia, Oppression, Pandemics, Peace, Photography, Photojournalism, Portraiture, Protests, Restaurants, Revolution, Senior Citizens, Social Distancing, Street, Video, Yearning, Youth
“People must take a modicum of public responsibility for each other even if they have no ties to each other.” Jane Jacobs



Tribeca is a tiny enclave southwest of Canal Street in downtown Manhattan. When the pandemic hit New York City, many went away.
From March to June Tribeca was an empty shell of calm.  Still, every night people burst out of their windows at 7 to bang on pots and pans and show appreciation for the self-sacrificing heroes of the pandemic.  

Throughout the dark cold months of spring, the neighborhood practiced restraint. Covid-19 was the collective enemy. The way to be protected as well as protect others was by wearing masks and gloves in public. New Yorkers were compliant until social awareness of the systemic police brutality done to black and brown Americans and then defiant protesting became a universal demand for justice.

Mostly I had stayed away from crowds during the early clashes between the police and the protestors. Until one night the mountain came to me.
Apocalyptic sounds of choppers in the sky over my building on West Broadway and Leonard Street ordered me out of the comfort zone.
The following video documents what happened the night when bike pedaling police officers encircled and barked at protestors, ironically in front of the New York Law School Library.

The slideshow of photographs was culled from the last four months.
 
One of my takeaways is that masks are not only preventative but they are cool. Masks do good and people feel good when they wear them.

Donna Ferrato 06.16.20
 

 


3,646

Also by Donna Ferrato —

Project

LIVING WITH THE ENEMY ARCHIVE CIRCA 1982-2024

Donna Ferrato
Project

Laurel School is #1Girls School in OHIO: I love my Alma Mater

Donna Ferrato / Shaker Heights, Ohio
Project

THE WEATHER LOOKS GOOD.

Donna Ferrato / Foley Square NYC 2022
Project

Gunna the Rapper meets Donna the Tribeca historian

Donna Ferrato
Project

Tribeca Cobblestone: Harrison Street Reconstruction

Donna Ferrato
Project

REFLECTIONS/Visual Constructions of Race

Donna Ferrato / Miami University, Oxford, Ohio
Project

Tales of the Tribecans

Donna Ferrato
Project

Chanukah,Tribeca, NY, 2021

Donna Ferrato
Project

VANITY FAIR ITALY: LA GRANDE FRATTURA

Donna Ferrato
Project

Mother Jones: The war on women is over and women lost

Donna Ferrato / New Mexico, Texas, Michigan, Virginia
Project

When Lightening Strikes We All Get a Little Crazy

Donna Ferrato / Tribeca New York
Project

Tribeca Festival - Women Filmmakers Cocktail

Donna Ferrato / tribeca
Project

Tribeca's Drag Queen Night

Donna Ferrato / Tribeca
Project

Robert DeNiro take my book

Donna Ferrato / Tribeca
Project

A Tale of Two Cities

Donna Ferrato / tribeca
Project

Aliens Hunting Demon Semen

Donna Ferrato and Fanny Ferrato / woodstock
Project

Ferratoflix Ep.3 - My Friend Jose

Donna Ferrato / Tribeca
Project

The W. Eugene Smith Award 2019

Donna Ferrato
Project

Throughout Time in Tribeca

Donna Ferrato / Tribeca
Project

Safe at Home

Donna Ferrato / Tribeca
Project

We Live in Public

Donna Ferrato
Project

Dyke Day 2019

Donna Ferrato / New York City
Tribeca in the Time of Coronavirus by Donna Ferrato
Sign-up for
For more access