Labor Daily | American Working Class, on view from March 20 through May 24, 2026 at the Winchester Galleries at the Griffin Museum, offers a compelling photographic meditation on work as both a lived experience and a defining cultural force. Through a diverse range of perspectives, the exhibition considers how labor continues to shape identity in the United States, even as its meanings, structures, and promises undergo profound change. These photographs look closely at work not as abstraction, but as daily reality—grounded in places, bodies, and routines that quietly sustain the nation.
Featuring work by Carl Corey, Chris Aluka Berry, Daniel Overturf, Inna Valin, Julie Dermansky, Terry Evans, and Xavier Tavera, the exhibition brings together artists whose practices span documentary traditions, long-form visual storytelling, and intimate portraiture. Their images move between rural and urban settings, industrial and domestic spaces, revealing labor as an evolving landscape shaped by economic shifts, environmental pressures, and social inequities. Each photographer approaches the subject with deep respect for the individuals they depict, emphasizing resilience over spectacle.
Rather than offering nostalgia for a vanished ideal,
Labor Daily confronts the present moment with clarity and empathy. The exhibition acknowledges how work, once closely tied to stability and pride, has increasingly become a matter of endurance for many. Yet within these frames, dignity persists—in gestures, postures, and moments of quiet determination. Labor is shown not only as what people do to survive, but as an extension of who they are, carrying histories of community, migration, and belonging.
The exhibition also underscores photography’s enduring role as a witness to social change. From environmental labor tied to land and climate, to service, caregiving, and industrial work often rendered invisible, these images insist on attention. They invite viewers to slow down and look closely, recognizing the human cost and human value embedded in everyday work.
Ultimately,
Labor Daily | American Working Class is both a tribute and a reckoning. It honors the persistence of those who labor while asking urgent questions about what work means today, and what it might yet become. Through these photographs, labor emerges not as a static concept, but as a living, shifting reflection of American life itself.
Image:
© Carl Corey