The Photographer Who Forced the U.S. to Confront Its Child Labor Problem

The Photographer Who Forced the U.S. to Confront Its Child Labor Problem

Lewis Wickes Hine’s 1909 photograph of a young spinner in a Georgia cotton mill
The Photography Collections, University of Maryland, Baltimore County (P545), under CC BY-SA 4.0

Traveling the country with his camera, Lewis Wickes Hine captured the often oppressive working conditions of thousands of children—some as young as 3 years old.

The social and political implications of Hine’s photographs have been very much on my mind. For the past two years, I have worked with a collection of more than 5,400 photographs Hine took in the early 20th century. These images were part of a major digitization and rehousing project at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County’s Special Collections, where I serve as head curator.

The patina of Hine’s black-and-white photographs suggests a bygone era—an embarrassing past that many Americans might imagine they’ve left behind.

But with numerous reports of child labor violations, many involving immigrants, occurring in the United States, along with an uptick in state legislation rolling back the legal working age, it’s clear that Hine’s work is as relevant today as it was a century ago.

“An investigator with a camera”

A sociologist by training, Hine began making photographs in 1903 while working as a teacher at the progressive Ethical Culture School in New York City.

Lewis Wickes Hine’s photograph of three young fish cutters working at the Seacoast Canning Co. in Eastport, Maine

Hine’s photograph of three young fish cutters working at the Seacoast Canning Company in Eastport, Maine

National Child Labor Committee Collection / Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division

Between 1903 and 1908, he and his students photographed migrants at Ellis Island. Hine believed that the future of the U.S. rested in its identity as an immigrant nation—a position that contrasted with escalating xenophobic fears.

Based on this work, the National Child Labor Committee, which advocated for child labor laws, hired Hine to document the living and working conditions of American children.

By the late 19th century, several states had passed laws limiting the age of child laborers and establishing maximum working hours. But at the turn of the century, the number of working kids soared. Between 1890 and 1910, 18 percent of children ages 10 to 15 were employed.

In his work for the National Child Labor Committee, Hine journeyed to farms and mills in the industrializing South and the streets and factories of the Northeast. He used a Graflex camera with 5-by-7-inch glass plate negatives and employed flash powder for nighttime and interior shots, hauling upwards of 50 pounds of equipment on his slight frame.

Lewis Wickes Hine, Trapper Boy, Turkey Knob Mine, MacDonald, West Virginia, 1908

Lewis Wickes Hine, Trapper Boy, Turkey Knob Mine, MacDonald, West Virginia, 1908

The Photography Collections, University of Maryland, Baltimore County (P148), under CC BY-SA 4.0

To gain entry into factories and other facilities, Hine sometimes disguised himself as a Bible, postcard or insurance salesman. Other times, he’d wait outside to catch workers arriving for or departing from their shifts.

Along with photographic records, Hine collected his subjects’ personal stories, noting their ages and ethnicities. He documented their working lives, such as their typical hours and any injuries or ailments they incurred as a result of their labor.

Hine, who considered himself “an investigator with a camera,” used this information to create what he termed “photo stories”—combinations of images and text that could be used on posters, in public lectures and in published reports to help the organization advance its mission.

Legislative reform

Hine’s muckraking photographs exemplify the genre of documentary photography, which relies upon the perceived truthfulness of photography to make a case for social change.

The camera serves as an eyewitness to a societal ill, a problem that needs a solution. Hine portrayed his subjects in a direct manner, typically frontally and looking straight into the camera, against the backdrop of the very factories, farmland or cities where they worked.

By capturing details of his sitters’ bare feet, tattered clothes, soiled faces and hands, and diminutive stature against hulking industrial equipment, Hine made a direct statement about the poor conditions and precarity of these children’s lives.

Lewis Wickes Hine, Group of Newsies Selling on Capitol steps, April 11, 1912

Lewis Wickes Hine, Group of Newsies Selling on Capitol Steps, April 11, 1912

The Photography Collections, University of Maryland, Baltimore County (P2904) under CC BY-SA 4.0

Hine’s photographs made a successful case for child labor reform.

Notably, the National Child Labor Committee’s efforts resulted in Congress establishing the Children’s Bureau in 1912 and passing the Keating-Owen Act in 1916, which limited working hours for children and prohibited the interstate sale of goods produced by child labor.

Although the Supreme Court later ruled it and the subsequent Child Labor Tax Law of 1919 unconstitutional, momentum for enshrining protections for child workers had been created. In 1938, Congress passed the Fair Labor Standards Act, which established restrictions and protections on employing children.

The National Child Labor Committee’s project also included advocacy for the enforcement of existing child labor regulations, a regulatory problem re-emerging today as the Department of Labor—the agency tasked with enforcing labor laws—comes under fire for failing to protect child workers.

A young picker carries a large sack of cotton on her back.

A young picker carries a large sack of cotton on her back.

Lewis Wickes Hine / Library of Congress via Getty Images

The ethics of picturing child labor

A recent surge of unaccompanied minors, primarily from Central America, has brought new attention to America’s old problem of child labor and has threatened the very laws Hine and the National Child Labor Committee worked to enact.

Some estimates suggest that around two-thirds of migrant children end up working full time, with some laboring more hours than current laws permit or working without the proper authorizations. Many of them perform hazardous jobs similar to those of Hine’s subjects: handling dangerous equipment and being exposed to noxious chemicals in factories, slaughterhouses and industrial farms.

While the content of Hine’s photographs remains pertinent to today’s child labor crisis, a key distinction between the subject of Hine’s photographs and working children today is race.

Hine focused his camera almost exclusively on white children who arrived in the country during waves of immigration from Europe during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. As art historian Natalie Zelt argues, Hine’s pictorial treatment of Black children—either ignored or forced to the margins of his images—implied to viewers that the face of childhood in America was, by default, white.

The perceived racial hierarchies of Hine’s era reverberate into the present, where underage migrants of color live and work at the margins of society.

Workers protest outside a Popeye’s restaurant in Oakland, California, on May 18, 2023, after reports emerged of the franchise exploiting child labor.

Workers protest outside a Popeye’s restaurant in Oakland, California, on May 18, after reports emerged of the franchise exploiting child labor.

Jane Tyska / Digital First Media / East Bay Times via Getty Images

Contemporary reports of child labor violations offer few images to accompany their texts, graphs and statistics. There are legitimate reasons for this. By not including identifying personal information or portraits, news outlets protect a vulnerable population. Ethical guidelines frown upon revealing private details of the lives of children interviewed. And, as Hine’s experience demonstrates, it can be difficult to infiltrate the sites of these labor violations, since they are typically kept secure.

Digital cameras and smartphones offer a workaround. Beginning in 2015, the International Labor Organization urged child laborers in Myanmar to become “young activists” and use their own images and words to create “photo stories”—echoing Hine’s use of the term—that the organization could then disseminate.

Photographs of child labor in foreign countries are far more common than those made in the U.S., which leaves the impression that child labor is someone else’s problem, not ours. Perhaps it’s too hard for Americans to look at this domestic issue square in the eyes.

A similar effect is at work when viewing Hine’s photographs today. While they were originally valued for their immediacy, they can seem to belong to a distant past.

But if Hine’s photographic archive of child laborers is evidence of the power of photography to sway public opinion, does the lack of images in today’s reporting—even if nobly intended—create a disconnect?

Is the public capable of understanding the harmful consequences of lack of labor enforcement when the faces of the people affected are missing from the picture?

This article is republished from the Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

Beth Saunders is a curator, educator and photo historian. She oversees the management, preservation, and exhibition of the University of Maryland, Baltimore County’s photography, rare book and archival collections.

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Vintage Pride Photography, from the 1900s to the 1980s

Vintage Pride Photography, from the 1900s to the 1980s
Gloria and Charmaine. Baltimore, Maryland. 1979 © JEB (Joan. E. Biren) from her book Eye to Eye: Portraits of Lesbians published by Anthology Editions

Starting with tender portraits of anonymous couples collected at flea markets and yard sales from the 1900s onward, we take a look at vintage Pride photography, capturing LBGTQ+ love stories through the decades. In 1979, the first book published in the US by a Lesbian photographer, featuring photographs of Lesbians, is published. And in the 1980s, Sage Sohier captures moments of togetherness and joy shared by LGBTQ+ families.

From The Invisibles: Vintage Portraits of Love and Pride, published by Rizzoli.

The Invisibles: Vintage Portraits of Love and Pride, published by Rizzoli, kicks off this collection of vintage Pride photography. The artist and filmmaker Sébastien Lifshitz collected these photos at yard sales and flea markets. He explains:

“To obtain these images, [the couples] had to have gone to a small neighborhood photo lab to develop the film and then go back to pick up the prints. They, therefore, had to run the risk of exposing themselves socially. The need to keep a memory of their love was certainly stronger than the disapproval of some business or any concerns about what others might say.’”

Pagan and Kady. Monticello, New York. © JEB (Joan. E. Biren) from her book Eye to Eye: Portraits of Lesbians published by Anthology Editions

Eye to Eye by JEB (aka Joan E. Biren)—widely regarded as the first book published in the US by a Lesbian photographer, featuring photographs of Lesbiansvwas made during a complex time in American History, as the Women’s Liberation, Civil Rights, and Black Feminist Movements paved the way for future generations.

JEB made her “first lesbian photograph,” a self-portrait with her lover, Sharon, in 1970.  Over the next eight years, she traveled throughout the United States to meet the womyn in the book. Once it was out in the world, the book was a revelation. Everyone wanted a copy: after JEB gifted a copy to the Mt. Holyoke library, it was stolen so many times that they had to lock it up with the rare books from the Middle Ages.

From At Home with Themselves: Same-Sex Couples in 1980s America, by Sage Sohier.

In the late 1970s, Sage Sohier discovered that her father, who had separated from her mother when she was a young child, was gay. The revelation inspired her to interview and photograph LGBTQ+ families across the United States, a journey that lasted two years. The result is the beautiful book At Home with Themselves: Same-Sex Couples in 1980s America.

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Foo Fighters, Florence + The Machine, A$AP Rocky, Jack Harlow, Trevor Noah, Alex Cooper, Emma Chamberlain, and More To Join Spotify Beach at Cannes Lions

Foo Fighters, Florence + The Machine, A$AP Rocky, Jack Harlow, Trevor Noah, Alex Cooper, Emma Chamberlain, and More To Join Spotify Beach at Cannes Lions

Next week, Spotify is returning to the South of France for the Cannes Lions Festival of Creativity, where we’ll transform Spotify Beach into a hub of activity dawn ’til dusk as we celebrate a new way to play. And we’re bringing along some big-name friends to join in the fun.

Our special opening-night soiree will feature an intimate performance by Grammy Award-winning artist H.E.R., as well as a DJ set from the unparalleled Collyer Twins

We’ll be hosting daytime masterclasses and nighttime events beginning Monday, June 19, and continuing through Thursday, June 22, emphasizing our focus on creativity, connection, and innovation. Attendees can look forward to sessions featuring Spotify leaders and guests including Alex Cooper, Issa Rae, Emma Chamberlain, and world-renowned football player Cesc Fàbregas. Author and comedian Trevor Noah will join Spotify CEO and Cofounder Daniel Ek for a conversation on the future of storytelling. Throughout the day, catch DJ Toyin spinning sets.

Then, as night falls on Tuesday, Florence + The Machine and Jack Harlow will take to the stage accompanied by DJs will.i.am and Uncle Waffles. Wednesday is primed for world-class performances from Foo Fighters and A$AP Rocky, and a DJ set from Disclosure. And our house DJ Taylah Elaine will brighten the beach with music throughout it all.  

Spotify Beach itself will feature several interactive experiences, like daily sound bath meditations, an immersive Songs of Summer soundscape, an FC Barcelona play zone, a “Sonic Sips” coffee-and-juice bar, a custom sunglasses gifting station, and much more.  

Read on for a full list of the sessions on the ground, then check back next week here on For the Record for the full takeaway from our novel masterclasses. 

Monday, June 19

Building a brand is more than meets the eye…and ear 

Owning your craft takes dedication, consistency, and commitment—something Spotify’s Taj Alavi, VP, Global Head of Marketing; Loewe’s CMO Charlie Smith; and Anything Goes creator Emma Chamberlain all know well. The trio will share their approaches to what they create; their style around partnerships and projects, brand building, and brand positioning; and how to engage the next generation of streamers.

Top hits and goal-scoring kicks: fandom, football, and media 

We’re hosting a conversation between football legend Cesc Fàbregas, award-winning football Freestyler Pola Gomez, Samsung Europe CMO Benjamin Braun, and Bradford Ross, Coca-Cola’s VP Global Sports and Entertainment Marketing and Partnerships. They’ll dive into the obsessive fan culture surrounding sports and how brands tap into fandoms of all kinds. 

Tuesday, June 20

The cutting edge of creativity and storytelling 

Join Daniel Ek and Trevor Noah at Spotify Beach as they discuss the future of storytelling and the art of navigating different mediums to forge a deeper connection with worldwide audiences. They’ll offer insights on how creators can tell stories in more meaningful ways and effectively leverage new technologies in the ever-evolving media landscape.

The art of the interview 

You don’t need to be an investigative reporter by trade to benefit from learning how to conduct a masterful interview. Things get meta as Spotify’s Chief Public Affairs Officer, Dustee Jenkins, sits down with Alex Cooper, Creator, Host, and Executive Producer of Call Her Daddy, to discuss the art of the interview. Learn how to craft the right questions, disarm your subject, and get straight to the heart of the matter.

Wednesday, June 21

Connecting to the sound of culture 

Spotify’s Global Head of Artist Partnerships, Joe Hadley; Tye Comer, Creative Development and Founder of Spotify’s Outside Voice program; and Erin Styles, Global Head of Ads Business Communications & PR, will spotlight SVP of Marketing at Frito-Lay North America, Tina Mahal; and WACL President Rania Robinson. They’ll discuss the importance of culture-shaping programs that support and amplify diverse voices. This comes as part of Spotfiy’s continued commitment to empowering creators and inspiring our audience to elevate underrepresented communities in their own work.

DJ Mixer

Turn it up with Spotify’s very own Xavier “X” Jernigan, Head of Cultural Partnerships and the voice of AI DJ. We’re rolling up the carpet for an afternoon mixer complete with games, cocktails, mingling, and—maybe—a surprise or two. 

So bookmark For the Record, follow @SpotifyNews and @SpotifyAds on social media, and stay tuned for much more as we discover a new way to play.

Can You Carry a Couch in an Envelope? IKEA’s SPACE10 Says Yes!

Can You Carry a Couch in an Envelope? IKEA’s SPACE10 Says Yes!

After AI-assisted exploration, SPACE10 has launched a new seating design that will have you re-thinking everything you thought about sofas. The IKEA research and design lab created the Couch in an Envelope as a way to challenge the traditional design of a couch in order to make it more sustainable, as well as adaptable and easy to transport. Couch in an Envelope, designed in collaboration with Panter&Tourron, begs the question – “Can a couch be designed to go flat, be put into envelope-like packaging, and then carried around by a human?” The answer is yes.

When you think of a couch, the idea of a heavy, bulky piece of furniture that’s difficult to move probably comes to mind. From the start of building to customer delivery, conventional couches take up more room to store and cost way more to transport thanks to their size and weight. Then there’s comfort, a necessity when it comes to a seat someone will be sitting on for periods of time, which in turn contributes to the bulkiness in the design and most often reduces the product’s sustainability. Throw in the fact that each sofa is made up of many components making it harder to recycle, which is why many just end up in landfills.

front view of a lime green sofa with pieces being added

“This project began as a way to challenge problematic design archetypes. The couch, as we know it today, is a complicated and high-maintenance piece of furniture; to find and to move. However beloved it is, the couch is often a strain on people owing to its weight, the planet due to its design intricacies, and a burden on the friends who generously help us to move. The project is an agenda for change, inspiring the design community to move further towards a couch that is better for us — and the planet,” says Georgina McDonald, Creative & Partnerships, SPACE10.

long view of lime green couch and chaise

In lieu of those couches that are heavy and hard to move, Couch in an Envelope is lightweight and designed for contemporary living. Adjustable wings attach to the flat base in various ways allowing for endless seating options, as well as making it more adaptable to one’s needs changing in the home. The design also works well when moved to a new place that might require a new type of seating arrangement. If one couch isn’t enough, multiple couches can be used together to make larger seating setups.

[embedded content]

Couch in an Envelope is built with aluminum, cellulose-based fabrics and yarns, and mycelium foam, all of which are 100% recyclable. By using lighter and less materials, the couch remains easy to assemble, disassemble, stack, or transport by a single person.

woman in white hate walking down road carrying large white envelope

SPACE10 came up with a list as to why one might choose Couch in an Envelope over an immovable sofa:
1. Light enough to carry alone (from A to B and up flights of stairs)
2. Easy on the planet (made with fewer, locally-sourced materials)
3. Foldable and flat-pack (easy to store, assemble, disassemble, and move)
4. Stackable on a factory pallet (more room for warehouse storage)
5. Easy on your friends (to move and assemble)
6. Modular and flexible (adjusts to your lifestyles and routines)
7. Tool-less and screw-less (for disassembly and recycling)
8. Durable and resilient to wear
9. Comfortable, cool, and easy to clean textiles
10. Easy to love

Pretty compelling list!

product shot of large white envelope holding collapsible sofa

SPACE10 and Panter&Tourron came together to explore why so many couches are designed the same way, leading them to experiment with AI to challenge that norm. At first, AI tools continued to come up with the archetypal shape of the sofa when “couch” was used for the prompt. “Outdated, unsustainable design archetypes embedded in large language models are problematic in algorithms, and negatively impacting the future of design. Presently, AI can only take us so far in design innovation before craft, and the human hand needs to intervene,” says Alexis Tourron, Design and Co-founder of Panter&Tourron.

Once Panter&Tourron started to add additional prompts, like “platform,” “lightweight,” “sustainable,” “recyclable,” and “easy to move,” a new series of modern seating designs were generated, all of which are lightweight, adaptable, and circular, while not falling into the traditional archetype.

gif of multiple images of lime green sofa in it's various positions

“Comfort is primarily the main requirement when designing a couch, which can compromise durability and sustainability. We wanted to simplify the material composition, prioritise weight, disassembly and circularity. We’ve envisaged something that’s 100% recyclable, without sacrificing softness. Couch in an Envelope is a new generation of comfort,” says Stefano Panterotto, Designer and Co-founder of Panter&Tourron.

multiple images of lime green sofa featured in all the various positions it can be used in

wooden palette holding lots of flat sofas in envelopes

Couch in an Envelopes stacked on a palette

side angled view of modular lightweight green couch

Photo: Seth Nicolas

The Couch in an Envelope prototype is on display at the Design in the Age of AI exhibition through November 30, 2023 at SPACE10 Gallery in Copenhagen.

view of modular sofa with green fabric

Photo: Seth Nicolas

down back view of modular sofa with green fabric

Photo: Seth Nicolas

down view looking at edge and side of modular sofa with green fabric

Photo: Seth Nicolas

For more information on Couch in an Envelope, visit space10.com.

Caroline Williamson is Editor-in-Chief of Design Milk. She has a BFA in photography from SCAD and can usually be found searching for vintage wares, doing New York Times crossword puzzles in pen, or reworking playlists on Spotify.

How to find your street photography style

How to find your street photography style

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The Wow of Pow Wow

The Wow of Pow Wow

By Jessica Wolf | Photos by Smallz + Raskind |

June 12, 2023

The drumbeat holds steady for days, with the sun beaming on colorful fabric that lifts in the breeze. Gourds rattle. Voices lift — in song, in prayer, in celebration, in communion. Dancers wearing traditional regalia enter and exit from the inner ring of a large circle bounded by clusters of families and friends. There are laughter and hugging, children playing. All have come together to witness one another, and to celebrate and preserve their cultural heritage. 

For nearly four decades, student organizers from UCLA’s American Indian studies program have welcomed members of Native and Indigenous communities from across the country to the UCLA campus for UCLA Pow Wow. Third-year microbiology, immunology and molecular genetics major Cheyenne Faulkner (Lumbee and Shoshone-Bannock) grew up dancing in pow wows in her community near San Diego. For the past two years, she has been leading the production of UCLA’s event as it emerged from a pandemic-fueled hiatus. In May, Pow Wow drew roughly 5,000 participants and spectators to Wallis Annenberg Stadium.

At UCLA Pow Wow, guests learn about Native culture as they peruse, purchase and enjoy traditional foods and jewelry, clothing and merchandise made by Native artists. A master of ceremonies — this year, Ruben Little Head (Northern Cheyenne) — works alongside the lead drummers and gourd dancers to keep the rhythm going, providing information and access points. A long-standing Pow Wow tradition is a pageant, after which the newly named Ms. Pow Wow Princess is welcomed into the arena with an honor song. She is now a UCLA ambassador to other pow wows across the state. 

At its heart, UCLA Pow Wow exists as a healing space, an opportunity for shared joy, for expressing gratitude, for offering up dreams. It is a time to acknowledge the ancestors who have come before, the ancestors among us now, and those yet to be. “My hope for attendees,” says Faulkner, “is that they will get to experience the beauty of Native culture and how our cultures and traditions still live on today.”

Click to see incredible photos from this year’s event 

The Wow of Pow Wow


Read more from UCLA Magazine’s Summer 2023 issue.

UCLA Magazine Summer 2023 Cover

LEGO Ideas ‘Landscape Photographer’ Kit Pays Tribute to Ansel Adams

LEGO Ideas ‘Landscape Photographer’ Kit Pays Tribute to Ansel Adams

LEGO Ideas 'The Landscape Photographer'

A photography-themed LEGO set has garnered significant support on LEGO Ideas, LEGO’s community-centered portal for creative builders to share their creations and even make proposals for future official LEGO sets.

LEGO Ideas member LobsterThermidor has proposed a LEGO set called “The Landscape Photographer.” With nearly 6,700 votes of support, the project features a photographer set up on top of an old wood-panel station wagon, capturing a photo using a large-format analog camera. Photography enthusiasts may instantly recognize the scene in the LEGO Ideas set.

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The Inspiration Behind the LEGO Ideas Design

LobsterThermidor, who is photographer and LEGO builder Nick Micheels, began designing his landscape photographer LEGO set as part of an official LEGO Ideas contest centered around nature activities.

LEGO Ideas 'The Landscape Photographer'

“The inspiration for this set came as a response to the LEGO Ideas platform hosting a challenge for fans to submit ideas based on the theme of nature activities. As a fan of photography and an amateur photographer myself, I knew I wanted to make a build focused on landscape photography, and I wanted to build a large format camera at minifigure scale,” Micheels tells DIY Photography.

LEGO Ideas 'The Landscape Photographer'

Landscape photography is a great way to get out in nature, and photographic history enthusiasts will know that photography played a crucial role in inspiring Americans to explore nature, and photography even helped shape America’s celebrated National Parks.

LEGO Ideas 'The Landscape Photographer'

LEGO Ideas 'The Landscape Photographer'

Who is the Famous Photographer Featured in ‘The Landscape Photographer?’

Micheels drew inspiration from one of history’s most famous photographers for his set and asked LEGO Ideas users if they could name the photographer in The Landscape Photographer set, using LEGO-themed teaser images as clues.

LEGO Ideas 'The Landscape Photographer'
These three graphics that Micheels crafted on his computer are ‘LEGO’ versions of three famous photographs.

Despite being simplified version of three landscape photos, it’s instantly clear that they’re Ansel Adams photographs. Adams was a significant photographer at the intersection of art and conservation was Ansel Adams, and arguably the most famous landscape photographer in history.

The rightmost LEGO photo is clearly The Tetons and Snake River, which Adams captured in Grand Teton National Park in Wyoming in 1942. It’s among the most well-known and easily recognized landscape images ever captured.

The leftmost image is from Yosemite National Park in California. However, it was a popular subject for Adams, so it’s not immediately clear precisely which image it is. It might be Clearing Winter Storm, captured in Yosemite in 1937. It could also be Thunderstorm from 1949.

The image in the middle is Aspens, a serene scene Adams shot in New Mexico in 1975.

Micheels tells DIY Photography that he has long been inspired by the work of Magnum photographers and the famous Group f/64. He doesn’t do much landscape photography himself, but the indelible mark that the work of great landscape photographers like Adams left on Micheels remains.

LEGO Ideas 'The Landscape Photographer'
Micheels went through three revisions for the famous station wagon.
LEGO Ideas 'The Landscape Photographer'
The old-school camera also went through an iterative design process.

There’s a lot of detail in the LEGO Ideas set. The Landscape Photographer draws heavy influence from an image captured by musician and photographer Cedric Wright.

The influential photographer born in 1889 met Ansel Adams on a hike in the 1920s, and the pair remained close friends. In 1942, Wright captured a famous portrait of Adams standing on top of a station wagon, capturing an image in Yosemite National Park. Even the car’s number plate is accurate to Wright’s portrait.

LEGO Ideas 'The Landscape Photographer'
There are quite a few pieces to “The Landscape Photographer” LEGO Ideas set.

Making ‘The Landscape Photographer’ LEGO Set a Reality

For Micheels’ excellent LEGO build to become a reality, it must get at least 10,000 votes on LEGO Ideas. The set needs about 7,300 more votes at the time of writing, with 729 days remaining in the campaign.

If “The Landscape Photographer” gets 10,000 votes, the official LEGO team will review the set and see if there’s a way to turn it into an actual set in collaboration with LEGO. Micheels will receive a portion of the royalties if the set ends up on store shelves.


Image credits: LobsterThermidor (Nick Micheels) on LEGO Ideas

Missing: Humpty Dumpty in front of Cornelius Elementary

Missing: Humpty Dumpty in front of Cornelius Elementary
June 12. By Dave Yochum. The Humpty Dumpty in front of Cornelius Elementary School has been missing since he was last seen sitting on a wall. Ann Wolfmayer said she was walking her granddaughter to school on Thursday when they noticed that part of the six-foot-tall sculpture was missing. Humpty sat atop a brick wall […]

Five artists shortlisted for 2023 Sobey Art Award

Five artists shortlisted for 2023 Sobey Art Award

Five artists, representing that number of regions of Canada, are now in contention for one of the most prestigious art prizes in the country.

The Nova Scotia-based Sobey Art Foundation and the National Gallery of Canada announced the five nominees for the 2023 Sobey Art Award on Wednesday. The shortlisted artists will vie for a first prize of $100,000, to be awarded in November at the NGC in Ottawa.

“The breadth of practices this year represents the multi-faceted texture and strength of contemporary artistic talent in this country,” said Jonathan Shaughnessy, NGC’s director of curatorial initiatives and chair of the Sobey Award jury. “The work of the five finalists present views on many urgent matters of our time, including 2SLGBTQ+ solidarities and representation, as well as critical questions regarding diasporic experience and Canadian identity.”

From east to west, the nominees are as follows:

From Moncton and currently living in Halifax, Seamus Gallagher is a lens-based artist who infuses queer aesthetics with self-portraiture. Outside of photography and video, the graduate of the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design and recipient of the 2022 Scotiabank New Generation Photography Award generally works with a video-game engine to create virtual reality art projects.

Open this photo in gallery:

Seamus Gallagher.Séamus Gallagher/Handout

Montreal-based Anahita Norouzi is a research-driven multidisciplinary artist whose practice is inspired by marginalized histories, botanical explorations and archeological excavations. The Tehran native and Concordia University graduate regularly travels between Iran and Canada to conduct her research.

Open this photo in gallery:

Anahita Norouzi.Handout

Michèle Pearson Clarke is a former photo laureate of Toronto whose work often focuses on Black and queer experiences of longing and loss. Born in Trinidad, she holds a master of social work from the University of Toronto and is assistant professor of photography at Toronto Metropolitan University.

Open this photo in gallery:

Michèle Pearson Clarke.Handout

Representing the Prairies and the North, Inuvialuk artist and curator Kablusiak creates work in a variety of mediums, including, but not limited to, lingerie, flour, soapstone, bed sheets and acrylic paint. The work from the Yellowknife-born, Calgary-based artist explores the Inuit diaspora and the effects of colonization on Inuit gender and sexuality expressions.

Open this photo in gallery:

Kablusiak Carpenter.Handout

Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill is a Métis artist and writer whose sculptural practice explores the history of found materials and challenges the notion of the city as a settled place. Exploring the concepts of land, property and economy, she incorporates such detritus as beer-can tabs, dollar-store lockets and dandelions into sculptures and works on paper she calls “spells.” The artist was born in Comox, B.C., and lives in Vancouver.

Open this photo in gallery:

Gabrielle L’Hirondelle Hill.Aaron Leon/Handout

Created in 2002 by the Sobey Art Foundation, the juried prize is awarded annually to an artist who has exhibited in a public or commercial art gallery within 18 months of being nominated, and who first landed on a long list of 25 nominees announced in April.

While the winner takes home $100,000, each runner-up will receive $25,000; each of the other 20 longlisted artists will be awarded $10,000. The NGC’s exhibition of works by the five finalists opens Oct. 13 and runs through March 3, 2024.

Winnipeg’s Divya Mehra won the Sobey in 2022. Her work, which often uses whimsy to comment on colonial cultural relationships, includes the Taj Mahal imagined as a bouncy castle.

Native-owned Business Offers Authentic Connections

Native-owned Business Offers Authentic Connections

In the summer, cruise passengers flood downtown Seattle and Pike Place Market as they look for the perfect memento before starting or ending their journey to Alaska.

One place on many tourists’ minds is Eighth Generation, a Native-owned lifestyle brand, which specializes in wool blankets designed by Native American artists and is one of the fastest growing Native-owned business in the country. At the end of May, Eighth Generation moved from its location in Pike Place Market just above the Gum Wall to a street-level space with more visibility at 1406 1st Avenue, directly across from the iconic Market.

“For a lot of people, our store is a destination spot,” Colleen Echohawk (Pawnee, Athabascan), Eighth Generation CEO said. “We also get a lot of people who happen across our store and are drawn in by our beautiful designs. For folks heading up to Alaska, there is a big emphasis on Alaskan Native culture on the ship, so their minds are primed and ready for a store like ours.”

The 2023 Seattle cruise season is expected to be the biggest season ever as it welcomes 290 sailings and over 1.4 million revenue passengers between April and October. Many cruise passengers spend some time before or after their cruise exploring Seattle and the region and supporting local businesses.  Overall, cruising from Seattle supports nearly $900 million a year in local economic activity and approximately 5,500 local jobs.

Reclaiming the market

Nooksack artist, activist, and entrepreneur Louie Gong founded Eighth Generation in 2008 when he started customizing shoes in his living room. In 2015, Eighth Generation became the first Native-owned business in the U.S. or Canada to sell Native-designed wool blankets, reclaiming a market that had been dominated by non-Native companies using fake “Native-inspired” designs for over a century, and growing the business of their artist partners through the Inspired Natives® Project.

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Eighth Generation opened its flagship store in Pike Place Market in 2016 and launched its own made-in-house wool textile line in 2020 — another first for a Native-owned business. Three years ago, Gong sold the business to the Snoqualmie Tribe and Echohawk took over as CEO in 2022.

The Native-designed wool blankets are designed by Native artists from across the country, spanning the East coast to Alaska. Their Gold Label Collection of Native-designed wool blankets are manufactured in Eighth Generation’s Georgetown studio.

“We are so honored to work with artists who trust us to bring authentic Native art and design into the marketplace,” Echohawk said.

With its 100% native-designed products, Eighth Generation provides an ethical, artist-centric approach while addressing the economic impact of cultural appropriation. Although the brand does the majority of its sales online, and takes orders from all over the United States, Canada, and other countries; and the brick-and-mortar store is an important part of Eighth Generation’s business.

Skyrocketing sales

During the pandemic, Eighth Generation saw sales at its Pike Place Market store drop as tourism and cruises came to a halt and it reduced hours to just a couple days a week.

“It’s sobering to think about all that business we missed out on,” Echohawk said. “But we had a strong online presence already so we were able to invest in online marketing and that was really great for us.”

Traditionally, Eighth Generation makes the most sales during the summer months. In July 2022, with Seattle cruise and tourism making a strong comeback after the pandemic, Eighth Generation had its best month of sales ever. With the store back open seven days a week, sales shot up 684% as compared to a year ago.

“We are very actively aware of cruise passengers and tourists in the city and do a lot of thinking about how we can get them to become lifelong customers,” Echohawk said. “We see a huge influx of people coming into our store during the summer. We are excited to connect them to true American art and to give them the opportunity to buy from incredible Native artists and help create economic sovereignty.”

Supporting Native art

Echohawk is proud that Eighth Generation offers something unique for tourists and showcases the artists behind the products.

“If a tourist is going into any other store, they will likely find a lot of fake Native products,” Echohawk said. “We sell authentic Native art that you can have in your home. Every home should have Native American art in it. Some people say ‘I’m not Native. Can I still buy Native art?’ Absolutely! People’s homes reflect their values and Native art is an amazing way to do that.”

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Eighth Generation also invites customers to learn about the artists who created the beautiful products that are for sale. When people walk into Eighth Generation, not only will they see beautiful Native-made products, they will find signage that shares more information about the products, artists and their stories, and tribal backgrounds.

“People stand around reading the signs like they are in a museum, but we go beyond the museum experience,” Echohawk said. “You learn about this artist and now you can buy a blanket, mug, or art piece by them. It’s a different way of engaging with American art and people really respond to it. It’s a very different kind of store. People want to be a part that special feeling.”

The staff are passionate about the products they sell. They take the time to tell customers who the artist is, provide information about the tribes and where they are from, and share funny stories if they have met the artist.

“It’s an opportunity for our staff to share their culture and history. The Native community is proud to have come from tribes that really resisted and decided to thrive, despite colonization,” Echohawk said.

Photos courtesy of Eighth Generation.