The Boston Globe’s photojournalism blog, The Big Picture, is one of the best online photojournalism sources. Here is their year in pictures.
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The Boston Globe’s photojournalism blog, The Big Picture, is one of the best online photojournalism sources. Here is their year in pictures.
Love Letter is a project by Stephen “ESPO” Powers with the City of Philadelphia Mural Arts Program. Municipally sponsored graffiti (with a love theme to boot) as a way to usher in gentrification for some of Philly’s toughest neighborhoods. Kitsune Noir writes “This time he’s taking along local and international artists to tag the sides of 50 walls between 63rd and 45th street on Market street. There’s going to be a documentary film along with two books documenting the process. He’s also going to provide training for youth and creating free signange for local businesses.” Dope.
Angel Warner, an employee at a Rite Aid distribution center, sat next to me recently in a congressional briefing room and described what happened when she and her fellow workers tried to form a union in their California workplace. She talked about the surveillance, constant threats and harassment they endured; how she and other workers were repeatedly taken aside and interrogated, one on one, about how they planned to vote; how two co-workers were fired; and how the rest lived in fear that any day they, too, might get a pink slip. The union filed numerous charges of unfair labor practices and eventually won the organizing election. But three years after the campaign began, Warner and her fellow Rite Aid workers still don’t have a contract.
Like most U.S. companies, Rite Aid takes full advantage of current labor law to try to keep workers from exercising their full rights to organize and collectively bargain under the National Labor Relations Act. Far from an aberration, such behavior by U.S. companies during union organizing campaigns has become routine, and our nation’s labor laws neither protect workers’ rights nor provide disincentives for employers to stop disregarding those rights.
More here from Kate Bronfenbrenner in The Washington Post.
Private Circulation, distributed solely by email, is a monthly PDF bulletin.
Previous issues have featured proposals, unrealized art projects,
brief histories, photo collections, large posters, and essays.
I don’t know exactly what it is, but David Lynch’s Interview Project should make for mighty good viewing.
Trees in the Wood