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March
30 through Aug. 26, 2001
Every
Worker is an Organizer:
Farm Labor and the Resurgence of the United Farm Workers
History
Special Gallery
Presented by the History
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The rise of
the farm labor movement in the 1960s and 1970s has been heavily
documented, but since the death of César Chávez in
1993 little attention has been paid to the continuing work of the
movement. David Bacon, photographer and journalist, former factory
worker and union organizer, continues to chronicle the state of
farm labor and of the union as it exists today in California. Fifty-eight
of his photographs are presented in the exhibition Every Worker
is an Organizer: Farm Labor and the Resurgence of the United Farm
Workers, on view at the Oakland Museum of California from March
30 to Aug. 26, 2001.
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Two
D'Arrigo Brothers strikers lead a march through the farmworker
barrio in Salinas
during the 1998 strike.
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Bacons
black and white photographs provide an intimate look at field labor,
union organizing activity and labor leaders during the United Farm
Workers 1996 drive to organize the entire central California Coast
strawberry industry, employing 25,000 workers. The exhibition also
documents organizing efforts among other fruit and vegetable workers,
including the palmeros who spend their days at the dangerous
job of harvesting dates at the tops of date palms. The images capture
the working lives of the peoplefrom strawberry pickers bent
doubled-over in the fields, engaged in the most painful labor imaginable,
to the extreme youth of todays farm workers, where the average
age has fallen to 20.
The photographs
provide a glimpse of the culture of the recent immigrants, many
of them indigenous peoples of southern Mexico, where Spanish is
a second language to their own dialects. The culture of the union
is revealed in the two images prominently carried in marches: the
Virgen de Guadalupe, providing a link to the church and expressing
the peoples belief that they have a moral right to a better
life, and the Mexican flag, a symbol of cultural pride. Photographs
also include images of the growers march, when the growers
appropriated cultural icons of workers and turned them around to
convince workers to join the companys union.
The documentation
of farm labor is an important part of the photographic tradition
in the United States. Dorothea Lange, Hansel Meith, Otto Hagel and
the generation of photographers of the 1930s and 1940s left a body
of work showing the exploitation of farm workers and documenting
early farm labor organizing efforts. The first two decades of the
growth of the United Farm Workers was one of the most-photographed
social protests of the Civil Rights era.
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Dolores
Huerta,secretary-treasurer of the United Farm Workers, enters
state capitol at end of month-long 1994 farmworkers' march.
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When César
Chávez died in 1993, the UFW was at the nadir of its power.
In 1994, under its new president Arturo Rodriguez, and with the
continuing leadership of its cofounder, Dolores Huerta, the UFW
began a push to rebuild its strength. Within two years, it had won
13 new contracts representing 6000 workers. In 1996, the UFW together
with the Teamsters Union and the organizing and field services departments
of the AFL-CIO began one of the most ambitious organizing drives
in the country. It is this drive that is documented in the exhibition.
As a senior
at Berkeley High School in 1965, David Bacon was the youngest person
arrested in Free Speech Movement protests on the U.C. Berkeley campus.
He spent 20 years as a factory worker and union organizer, including
several years as an organizer for the United Farm Workers. Since
the mid-1980s he has worked full time as a journalist and photographer,
documenting farm labor, immigration and the impact of the global
economy on workers. He has published numerous photo essays, and
his photography has been exhibited widely throughout the United
States. He is working on a book about farm labor and the UFWs
organizing efforts in California.
For more photography at OMCA visit our photography
resource page.
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