Lillie Rice

United States

Portfolio
Hour Children
01/24/2022
Welcome to the Table: Hour Working Women Program - Hour Children

Hour Working Women Program (HWWP) has been through a period of transition. Throughout all of it the participants have been committed to the workshops and classes, their professional futures, and, as always, have been the driving force in the success of the program. This fall, HWWP opened its doors once again to the community, offering...

Hour Children
01/24/2022
Welcome to the Table: Hour Children's Programs - Hour Children

"It's like you can be a kid again," says Mercedes Lopez, Program Coordinator at the Tots Program. "Even when you play with them, you forget how they think. It's interesting to see their perspective on things as opposed to yours. You never would have thought of that if you didn't see it from a child's perspective."

Hour Children
01/24/2022
Welcome to the Table: Rikers Program - Hour Children

To support people's loved ones inside the Rose M. Singer Center Correctional Facility on Rikers Island, Hour Children's Visiting and Family Assistance Program provides in-person and virtual services to people detained at the Rose M. Singer Center. Hour Children and the Osborne Association partnered in the spring of 2021 to meet the needs of justice involved people and their families in order...

Big Duck
Attracting visitors with an updated brand - Big Duck

The Newark Museum of Art is one of the oldest and largest museums in New Jersey. To get new visitors (families with kids living at home, young people, regional tourists, and Newark residents) in the door-and make the Museum matter to 21st-century audiences-they needed to make a more powerful first impression.

Hypertext Magazine
01/14/2020
Emerging writer Lillie Rice: Blue Flower Tattoo

Lillie Rice is a native Chicagoan and recent graduate of Sarah Lawrence College. Her visual art has been published in the Sarah Lawrence Review. She continues to read and write poetry while living in New York City.

Big Duck
Words matter: Creating a language guide to inform your communications.

Is your nonprofit working on how it can be more inclusive? One of the many ways you can do that is through the messaging and content you produce. Words matter. When we talk about particular groups or people that we may not identify with, it is easy to use language that may exclude or alienate them.