From March 20 through May 24, 2026,
Labors of Love | Illuminating the Archive brings the work of Edward Boches into dialogue with that of Arthur Griffin in the Founder’s Gallery at the Griffin Museum of Photography. Part of the museum’s ongoing Illuminating the Archive series, the exhibition invites a contemporary photographer to respond to Griffin’s vast body of work, creating a conversation across generations grounded in shared values of observation and respect.
Boches, a Boston- and Cape Cod–based documentary photographer, has spent years immersed in communities defined by dedication: amateur boxers training in spare gyms, social justice activists organizing behind the scenes, oyster farmers tending their beds before dawn. His practice resists spectacle. Rather than focus on the triumphant moment—on stage, in print, or plated for applause—he turns his lens toward rehearsal, preparation, and repetition. The photographs honor the discipline required to pursue a calling, suggesting that meaning resides not only in achievement but in persistence.
In revisiting Griffin’s archive, Boches discovered a kindred sensibility. Griffin, whose career spanned much of the twentieth century and who became a pioneer in the expressive use of color film, documented athletes, performers, and working people throughout New England with curiosity and dignity. As a photojournalist for publications including the Boston Globe and national magazines, he captured everyday life with clarity and warmth, revealing the pride embedded in ordinary labor.
Installed alongside the larger exhibition
Labor Daily | American Working Class, this focused presentation underscores a common thread: devotion to craft. Whether depicting a Pulitzer Prize–winning writer at work or a lobster fisherman hauling traps, both photographers seek the same quiet intensity. Their images affirm that behind every public accomplishment lies unseen effort—labors of love that define character, sustain communities, and bind past to present through the enduring language of photography.
Image:
Cleaning the Run © Edward Boches