The Story of the Stuff: Issues in Temporary Memorial Preservation Main MenuWhat Are Temporary Memorials?A DefinitionThe Problem of Temporary MemorialsEssential Questions to BeginCase StudiesCase Studies IntroductionTexas A&M & the Bonfire Memorabilia CollectionCase StudyVirginia Tech & the April 16th Condolence ArchiveCase StudySandy Hook Elementary & the Story of the StuffCase StudyFurther StudyQuestions & Recommended ReadingsAshley Maynor5adce0171052a8cc24f02b7c0a0c96951154dfb5Self-Reliant Film
Yolie Moreno Interview
12022-01-29T12:01:08-08:00Ashley Maynor5adce0171052a8cc24f02b7c0a0c96951154dfb560701Yolie Moreno discusses her project to document the Letters to Newtown project three months after the tragedy.plain2022-01-29T12:01:10-08:00Ashley Maynor5adce0171052a8cc24f02b7c0a0c96951154dfb5
This page is referenced by:
12015-09-16T17:17:22-07:00The Resident3Yolie Morenoplain2022-01-29T12:03:29-08:00 Yolie Moreno, Newtown resident, was so moved by the letters she felt compelled to save them. She gathered up a group of volunteers and began the ambitious project to photograph each and every letter sent to Newtown. This endeavor started at the town hall but later expanded to a donated storefront, dubbed the Newtown Healing Arts Center, which operated in the spring and early summer of 2013, for a total of six months.
Her project culminated in a website of photographs of the letters, called Embracing Newtown.
"The project, really is about sharing love. It's not so much a project of archiving and documenting and historical documents.
I consider this, and then the space that we hold doing this project as standing in love. Love came to us and we're spreading it out again and just sharing it with everyone in the world."