HomepageRightColumnTop: Difference between revisions

(put Carnaval on home page)
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
<div class="imageLeft">[[Image:Foundsf feature strange-sunglasses.jpg]]</div>
<div class="imageLeft">[[Image:Mission-dolores-mural-heart-w-daggers-for-front-page.jpg]]</div>
<div class="textRight"><span class="header">The Birth of Carnaval on the Streets of San Francisco</span>
<div class="textRight"><span class="header">The Hidden Mural at Mission Dolores</span>
   <p>
   <p>
     <span class="bold">1979, Precita Park</span>
     <span class="bold">detail, hidden mural</span>
     <br />
     <br />
On February 25th, 1979, a windy, cold and rainy Sunday in San Francisco, about three hundred drummers and dancers, dressed in multifarious colors and shapes, paraded around Precita Park in the Mission District.. . . . [[The Birth of Carnaval on the Streets of San Francisco|see more]]
Behind the wooden altar in the sanctuary at Mission San Francisco de Asîs, is a wall painted in the late eighteenth century by Indian labor. The mural, which is adorned with abstract patterns as well as Christian imagery, is still virtually unknown to the public, despite its rediscovery and subsequent publicity in early 2004. . . . . [[The Hidden Mural at Mission Dolores|see more]]
   </p>
   </p>
</div>
</div>

Revision as of 21:20, 5 September 2010

The Hidden Mural at Mission Dolores

detail, hidden mural
Behind the wooden altar in the sanctuary at Mission San Francisco de Asîs, is a wall painted in the late eighteenth century by Indian labor. The mural, which is adorned with abstract patterns as well as Christian imagery, is still virtually unknown to the public, despite its rediscovery and subsequent publicity in early 2004. . . . . see more