"Working Stiff: Photography from the Collection"

Queens Museum of Art

poster for "Working Stiff: Photography from the Collection"

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Working stiffs, an archaic phrase from the slang of mid 20th century American life, suggests the deadly dullness and mind-numbing repetition of the life of the working class: from back-breaking, often brutal manual labor to the endless drudgery of mundane office tasks. Fifty photographs have been selected from the permanent collection of the Queens Museum of Art to articulate what it is to work, cross-culturally and geographically, throughout the 19th and 20th centuries. An extensive range of images highlight contemporary artists such as Sylvia Plachy, Pedro Meyer and Dulce Pinzon whose insightful works reveal the visages of laundry attendants, tailors, servants and even seasonal Santa Clauses with both intelligence and humor, to 19th century anonymous photographers documenting the daily life of the trades in Europe, the United States and the Far East. In the early to mid 20th century, the stark iconic documentary photography of Lewis W. Hine, Berenice Abbott, W. Eugene Smith, Reginald Marsh, Dorethea Lange, Josef Breitenbach and others portray the transformation of the industrial age and its imprint on the human condition. The blossoming of photojournalism allows us an intimate, almost voyeuristic window into what it means to earn a living through daily labor in works that range from high steel welders constructing the Empire State Building to Ringling Brothers aerialists and Moscow Circus acrobats, as well as celebrating New York City mounted policemen, soldiers and officers in wars from the Crimean to World War I, and rural American doctors. Building the city or working in fields from New York to the Mekong Delta, images of men and women toil by rolling cigars in a Pittsburgh sweatshop, wrapping tea in cloth packages in Japan or carrying cement in Delhi, conveying the universality of our daily occupations.

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