Bill Owens: Work and Leisure offers a witty and affectionate glimpse into the everyday lives of Americans in the 1970s, a period caught between the social revolutions of the previous decade and the technological dawn of the 1980s. Owens’ photographs open doors into private worlds—living rooms, backyards, offices, and parties—where leisure, labor, and aspiration blend into a portrait of middle-class life both ordinary and extraordinary.
Drawn from Owens’ celebrated series
Leisure (1972),
Our Kind of People (1975), and
Working: I Do It for the Money (1977), the works on view capture a specific slice of America—prosperous, suburban, and largely white—rooted in California and the Midwest. Yet, beneath their regional focus, these images reflect a broader cultural rhythm: the optimism and contradictions of postwar domesticity. Owens’ lens balances humor and empathy, gently poking fun at the rituals of modern comfort while finding sincerity in its subjects’ dreams and routines. His photographs suggest that the suburban ideal, so often mythologized, is as fragile and human as the people who inhabit it.
Each image is accompanied by a quote from the subject, a detail that gives voice and agency to the photographed, turning the viewer into both witness and participant. These captions preserve the rhythms of conversation and self-perception from a half-century ago, reminding us how people wanted to be seen in a time of shifting identity and expectation. To some, the scenes may appear quaint or nostalgic; to others, they remain sharply familiar, reflecting enduring themes of community, conformity, and self-expression.
Organized by Senior Curator Laura Burkhalter, this exhibition features works generously gifted to the collection by Dr. Steven and Yasemin Miller and Jeff Perry in honor of Jacqueline and Myron Blank. Owens’ photographs invite us all to pause, smile, and step back into a time when the American dream was both celebrated and quietly questioned.
Image:
Bill Owens (American, born 1938)
We really enjoy getting together with our friends to drink and dance. It’s a wild party and we’re having a great time., from the “Suburbia” series, 1971 (printed 1999)
Gelatin silver print
Des Moines Art Center Permanent Collections: The Jeff Perry Photography Collection given in honor of Myron and Jacqueline Blank, 2024.119