Art of labor

Art of Labor is a cultural arts program sponsored by the Workforce Development Institute. These art, writing, and photography workshops create 'positive images of workers' across New York State, teaching communication skills, 'building a community within the Labor Movement', and 'encouraging worker dignity'. From 2004 to 2009, The Art of Labor program was called UnseenamericaNYS.

Exhibitions
The final works of art are exhibited to the public after the workshop has been completed. The exhibit spaces range from Labor Union halls and libraries, to community centers, museums, and historical societies. One of the most remarkable exhibits was on June 2 to October 21, 2007 at The New York State Museum in Albany, NY: "Unseenamerica NYS: Pictures of Working Life Taken by Working Hands" featured large 5x5 cloth banners of photographs and stories by healthcare workers, tractor-trailer drivers, janitors, security guards, teachers, immigrants from India and Peru, refugees from Burma, Bosnia, Darfur, Somalia and scores of others.

Another notable exhibit was from April 5 to April 30, 2005 in New York City. "Graphic Work Imaging Today’s Labor Movement", a poster contest curated by Josh MacPhee and Zoeann Murphy, and sponsored by the Graphic work curated by Josh MacPhee and Zoeann Murphy, Workforce Development Institute and JustSeeds.

The "Graphic Work" exhibit displayed that the American labor movement has an amazing history of graphic production, creating some of the most effective political images in the history of this country. However, work and workers, along with the labor movement, are often depicted as experiences of the American past: paintings of Joe Hill, photographs from the early 1900s of children working in factories, historic strikes and Rosie the Riveter. Today’s workforce looks dramatically different from the majority of images used to depict labor. To address this issue we asked innovative artists to create posters that depict contemporary jobs, the people that do them and the issues workers now face.