400 N. Ashley Drive
Cigars! Photography, Industry, and Identity, on view at the Florida Museum of Photographic Arts from April 9 through July 19, 2026, traces the intertwined histories of labor, migration, and culture that shaped Ybor City into a global center of cigar production. Timed to coincide with the 140th anniversary of the first cigar rolled in the district, the exhibition brings together historical material and contemporary perspectives to examine how a single industry left a lasting imprint on a community and its identity.
At the heart of the exhibition lies a selection of nineteenth- and early twentieth-century photographs drawn from The Burns Collection & Archive. These images offer a vivid glimpse into factory life during Ybor City’s formative years, when waves of immigrants—primarily from Cuba, Spain, and Italy—transformed Tampa into a thriving industrial hub. Photographs of cigar rollers at work, communal gatherings, and everyday street scenes reveal a world where labor and social life remained deeply interconnected, shaped by shared traditions and political consciousness.
Set alongside these archival works are contemporary photographs by Zack Wittman, whose project documents the remaining cigar factory buildings and the individuals who continue to sustain this heritage. His images move between architectural study and portraiture, capturing both the physical remnants of the industry and the people who embody its ongoing legacy. Through these photographs, the past does not appear as a closed chapter but as a living presence embedded in the city’s fabric.
The dialogue between historical and contemporary imagery underscores photography’s role as both record and reinterpretation. The exhibition suggests that images do more than preserve memory; they actively shape how histories are understood and transmitted. In this case, the story of Ybor City emerges not only as an industrial narrative but also as one of resilience, cultural exchange, and collective identity.
By focusing on the human dimension behind the craft of cigar making,
Cigars! offers a nuanced portrait of a community defined by its workers. It reflects on how traditions endure, adapt, and continue to inform the present, reminding viewers that industry, at its core, remains inseparable from the people who sustain it.
Image:
Photographer Unknown, Six Men Posed with Cigars, c. 1910, gelatin silver print, Burns Collection & Archive