Posts tagged “black and white

Every Worker is an Organizer: Photographs by David Bacon Exhibited at the State Capitol

Every Worker is an Organizer
Fhotographs by David Bacon

This exhibit in the California State Capitol is organized by Assembly Member Luis Alejo and his staff, and is part of the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the United Farm Workers of America.

California State Capitol
Hallway next to the Governor’s Office
May 20-26, 2012
Sacramento, California
Open to the public

Farm labor is a key element historically in the photographic documentation of social reality in the US, and in particular the documentation of social protest.  Dorothea Lange, Hansel Meith, Otto Hegel, and the generation of the 1930s and 1940s left a body of work showing the extreme exploitation of farm workers, and documenting the early farm labor organizing efforts, part of the great labor upsurge of those decades.

The iconography of social documentary photography was shaped by images like Lange’s mother and children in Nipomo, or those of the Pixley cotton strikers packed onto the back of a truck under their banner “Disarm the rich farmer or arm the workers for self-defense!” or the growers with their rifles waiting in ambush.

The first two decades of the growth of the United Farm Workers was undoubtedly one of the most-photographed social protests of the civil rights era.  It too had its icons — the line of marchers on their way from Delano to Sacramento, silhoutted against the sky, or Cesar Chavez weakened by his fast, at the side of Robert Kennedy.

In 1994, a year after the death of Chavez, the union made a second march from Delano to Sacramento.  In 1996, it began an effort to organize the central California coast strawberry industry, employing 25,000 workers. That struggle pitted workers and the union against mass firings, blacklists, company unions, and the use of the legal structure to subvert workers’ efforts.  In 1998, workers at the country’s then second-largest vegetable grower, D’Arrigo Brothers walked out on strike in the Salinas Valley

The photographs in this exhibit document this period in the union’s history, especially the organizing drive in Watsonville and the strike at D’Arrigo.  Some also document working lives of workers themselves.  Strawberry pickers bend over double in the rows, run as they pick wine grapes or tomatoes, or balance at the top of date palms without safety lines. They show as well the extreme youth of farm workers today, where the average age has fallen to 20.

Like all workers, farm laborers take pride in the skill it takes to do their jobs, their bravery in the face of dangerous conditions (farm labor has one of the highest occupational injury rates of all US employment), and the social contribution they make in providing food for millions of people.

These are not images of passive exploitation, designed to elicit just a sympathetic response.  They are  a documentary record of the efforts workers have made to organize a union in the face of brutal working conditions and low wages.

The images are a view from below, looking at the work process and the union from the point of view of workers.
The UFW has had an enormous impact on the US labor movement over the last 50 years.  It helped to inspire a resurgence of interest in organizing, and trained hundreds of people who went on to become organizers for unions and community organizations all across the country.

These photographs are part of a larger exhibition and documentary project about farm workers and migration tody.  This set of images was exhibited at the Oakland Museum of California, the U.S. Labor College, Bread and Roses Gallery and the American Labor Museum, thanks to support from the Northern California Coalition for Immigrant Rights and the Zellerbach Foundation. 


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Look what I can do!

Check out Adam developing his film with his own vitamin C process.
Got any creative ways to develop or print film you want to try our??
let us know we are always down to help.


2012 San Jose Historical Photography Contest

Image

In honor of Historic Preservation month this May, The City of San Jose Historic Landmarks Commission invites you to submit your best photographic image representing a historically significant property that contributes to the character of San Jose.

The contest will be judged in two contestant levels: Students (up to age 19) and adults. Open to all skill levels. 1 entry allowed per person. Photograph must have been taken in the city of San Jose, California, during the time frame of January 1, 2011, to April 11, 2012.

All submissions must be received by midnight April 11, 2012.

Visit www.SJ HistoricalPhoto.com for more information.

 

Up Your Game! Take this Darkroom Techniques Class, Saturday, April 28


April Fast-track Black and White Film Development Class!

Monthly happening at De-bug so if you want to know how they did it before digital, come through! :)  


New Glassclops — So International….

Check out the new issue of Glassclops featuring super stunning photography by San Jose native son Abraham Menor, Stephen Brown, Aaron Cho, Paul Glover, Vladimir Tikay, and Kasha Guilfoyle-Jackson.


Love to Virginia’s Paul Glover

What — a photographer who shoots almost exclusively in film!! Yes!! 3,000 miles can separate us but we are showing love to Paul Glover who is based in Salem, Virginia.

Check out his site at www.paulglover.net and his flickr below…

 


Refresher Sessions at the Darkroom


Check him out: Felipe Vasquez

He’s a local photographer from Newark, CA who does amazing photos of Chicano culture and music.  “”I want everyone who has eyes to be able to appreciate my work” Felipe R. Vazquez.  This year, he’s shooting with only film after mastering digital for so long.  He’s also mentoring youth in a photography program he designed with the Arts Association of the East Bay, a non-profit organization he helped start.


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