Digital Guides Hard Graft: Work, Health and Rights Digital Guides

Hard Graft: Work, Health and Rights

Exhibition text

Explore the profound impact of physical work on health and the enduring fight for workers’ rights through our new major exhibition.

Introduction to access resources

‘Hard Graft’ explores the impact of work on health. Moving from historical to contemporary accounts, the exhibition makes links between underrepresented work, the people who do it and where it takes place.

The exhibition focuses on three workspaces: the plantation, the street and the home. Each of these locations has been – and continues to be – a site for work that is undervalued by society but is crucial to how it functions. From tea picking to sanitation work, ‘Hard Graft’ asks what kinds of work are valued and why. What traces does work leave on the body? How can work reinforce health inequalities and a lack of agency?

During the Covid-19 pandemic, the idea of what constitutes “essential work” was brought into sharp focus. Health inequalities were revealed between people in lower paid, public-facing jobs and those who were able to isolate. ‘Hard Graft’ looks before and beyond Covid-19, recognising work and workers that systemically remain on the margins of society. The exhibition also honours histories of resistance, the power of collective action and the spiritual and medicinal healing practices that, in the face of oppression, have provided solace and power to workers.

Digital Guide

The guide contains a highlights tour available in audio with audio description and as videos with British Sign Language (BSL). The guide has 12 stops, each around four minutes long, featuring the voices of the curator and artists in the exhibition.

Use your phone to scan the QR code to access each stop, or pick up a player and follow the track numbers. For instructions on how to use the player, key in 700.

QR codes also provide access to all exhibition texts in screen-readable format.

Please speak to a member of staff for more details on how to access the digital guide.

Gestures of Labour

Adelita Husni Bey

2009

Super 8 film transferred to video, silent

5 minutes 39 seconds

Courtesy of the artist and Laveronica Arte Contemporanea

This silent video was produced in the kampungs of Jakarta, Indonesia. Kampungs are neighbourhoods occupied by newly arrived migrants in which small, informal cooperatives are set up to provide basic necessities, including housing, education and work.

The film concentrates on the rhythmic repetition of the migrant workers’ hand gestures, showing the body as the predominant machine in the production of everyday objects.

Our Lives and Our Struggles

Bouba Touré

1980 – 2000 / 2024

Giclée prints on paper

Bouba Touré Archive

Bouba Touré (1948 – 2022) was a Franco-Malian film projectionist, photographer, writer and farmer. He documented the everyday lives of migrants and migrant workers’ movements, such as les sans-papiers (without papers) in Paris. These photographs show street gatherings of citizens from France’s former colonial territories fighting for freedom of movement. Touré honours the migrant-led movements that led to the improvement of workers’ rights and the recognition of thousands of undocumented migrants despite the ongoing rise of hostile immigration laws in France.

Ministry of Labour officials interviewing Jamaican immigrants at the Labour Exchange, Clapham, London, 23 June 1948

TopFoto

1948 / 2020

Silver gelatin photograph

Immigrants from the West Indies arrive at Southampton, England, 1 May 1954

TopFoto

1954 / 2020

Silver gelatin photograph

Collection of Autograph, London

Following the Second World War, thousands of people from Commonwealth countries in the Caribbean were asked by the British government to relocate to the UK to help with labour shortages. They are often referred to as the Windrush generation, after the ship HMT Empire Windrush on which the first group arrived in 1948. They have made a fundamental contribution to key British infrastructure, with many working as bus drivers, sanitation workers, cleaners and nurses in the National Health Service.

The Plantation

Plantations, large-scale expanses of land focused on agricultural work, were an early capitalist practice. First established in the 16th century by Portuguese and Spanish settlers on the island of São Tomé off the west coast of Africa, the plantation model was soon introduced by the English in Wales and Ireland. This model was then widely employed by European settlers in their colonisation of the Americas and across the Global South. They exploited overworked, enslaved people to maximise profits for their owners.

Scientific research identified many common impacts on the bodies of plantation workers caused by their inhumane working conditions. These include poor body development, malnutrition and injuries, as well as premature death. Unhealthy and overcrowded living conditions enhanced the spread of illnesses and infectious disease. In response, collective strategies for escape and survival were developed by enslaved people. Herbal healing practices stemming from Indigenous American and African knowledge counteracted racist medical practices imposed on their bodies.

Today, people still work on plantations around the world. Here, in an ongoing photographic series, artist Md Fazla Rabbi Fatiq documents its impact on workers’ health in Bangladesh.

Practical rules for the management and medical treatment of Negro slaves, in the sugar colonies

Dr [David] Collins

1803

Hardcover book

King’s College London, Foyle Special Collections Library, The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office Historical Collection, R473 COL

This book shows how Western medicine was used to sustain plantation economies by justifying the importance of slavery in the West Indies. Dr Collins wrote that plantation owners should view medical treatment for enslaved people as an investment. Keeping the workforce ‘healthy’ would lead to an increase in productivity and wealth. The book includes treatments for various infectious diseases, such as yaws and pox, as well as instructions on the management of enslaved people’s housing, food and labour, demonstrating the extreme level of control over their lives.

Slaves on a hillside coffee farm in the Paraíba Valley region

(Escravos em terreiro de uma fazenda de café na região do Vale do Paraíba)

Marc Ferrez

c. 1882 / 2024

Giclée print on paper

Marc Ferrez / Gilberto Ferrez Collection / Instituto Moreira Salles

The Brazilian photographer Marc Ferrez (1843– 1923) documented the rapid transformation of Brazil’s modern urban development and landscapes. He focused on the coffee fazenda, or plantation, that was responsible for the growth of the Brazilian Empire’s wealth in the early 19th century. Fazendas were highly profitable due to their fast production, ideal weather conditions and the rise of migrant labour in the country. This photograph was commissioned by the plantation owner and the Centre for Farming and Commerce to promote coffee production in international exhibitions. The violence of slavery is concealed in this calm scene depicting discipline, order, power and wealth on the plantation.

A tea plantation in China: workers tread down congou tea into chests

Unknown artist

19th century

Lithograph print with watercolour

Wellcome Collection, 25238i

This print, from a series of 12, shows tea plantation work in China. Each print depicts different steps in the production of tea, including sowing, cultivation, drying and its exportation from China to Europe. This scene outlines the power dynamics involved in how the work was performed. The authoritarian, symmetrical space reflects the hierarchical relationship between workers’ occupations. These are ordered according to their position, clothing and the striking difference in the physical endurance required for each job.

Dark Garden

Md Fazla Rabbi Fatiq

2021 – ongoing / 2024

Giclée prints on Hahnemühle paper

Courtesy of the artist

Tea gardens were created in the Bangladeshi region of Sylhet in 1854 by British merchants. People from different parts of India migrated to the region with the promise of decent work. Today, workers do not have the right to own land and most work informally, earning an average daily wage of US $1.42 (£1.13). The beautiful landscape conceals the harsh and unsafe working conditions for tea workers. Md Fazla Rabbi Fatiq’s photographs reveal a worker’s hand crushed by a machine for processing tea leaves and an eye injured by harmful pesticides.

Herbal Healing and Resistance

Ancestral herbal medicine and food knowledge – tightly aligned with religious practices – were vital to enslaved people, who had to endure inhumane working conditions. 

Marronnage, the escape of enslaved people, was a fundamental act of resistance and freedom. It was labelled a mental health condition named drapetomania in racist scientific studies by the American physician Dr Samuel A Cartwright in 1851.

Safe communal living environments were built by enslaved Indigenous and African people who escaped the plantation system, with new forms of shared labour and social relations. Growing food, and the revival of cultural and spiritual practices which had been erased through forced migration, were crucial for healing the body, mind and spirit. These practices were handed down from generation to generation and are still widely used today.

General history of the insects of Suriname and all of Europe, containing their descriptions, their figures, their different metamorphoses, as well as descriptions of the plants, flowers and fruits on which they feed… with some details on toads, lizards, snakes, spiders… from Suriname

(Histoire générale des insectes de Surinam et de toute l’Europe, contenant leurs descriptions, leurs figures, leurs differentes metamorphoses, de même que les descriptions des plantes, fleurs et fruits, dont ils se nourissent… avec quelques détails sur les crapauds, lézards, serpents, araignées… de Surinam)

Maria Sibylla Merian

1705 / 1771

Early printed book with leather binding

Wellcome Collection, EPB/F/980.v1

German naturalist Maria Sibylla Merian (1647 –  1717) researched the rich fauna and flora in Suriname, a former Dutch colony on the northeast coast of South America. She produced one of the first and most compelling botanicals made by a woman. It includes over 60 colour drawings of plants and their interdependent ecosystem of insects and animals. Merian’s descriptions of each plant’s properties and usage was heavily influenced by the knowledge of the enslaved women she was introduced to by the owner of a sugar plantation.

This page shows the Caesalpinia pulcherrima, also known as the peacock flower, used by enslaved women to abort unwanted pregnancies and resist bearing a child that would be born into enslavement.

Charmaine Watkiss

Charmaine Watkiss celebrates the transgenerational ancestral herbal knowledge shared by her family and within the wider African diaspora. Each work depicts medicinal and edible plants and fruits that carry powerful healing properties. These were used to secretly cure illnesses and prevent diseases as an act of survival and self-dependency, distinct from Western medicine. The connection between herbal healing and African spiritual practices is represented by cosmological symbols discreetly tattooed on the women’s bodies. Natural dyes – such as Jamaica’s Blue Mountain coffee and indigo – and materials such as brass and raffia palm embed historical knowledge in the fabric of the works. This knowledge is preserved, yet concealed, by the figures who avoid the viewer’s gaze.

The Matriarch I

2021, Graphite, colour pencil, watercolour, gum,
ink and Reckitt’s Blue on paper

Leeds Museums and Galleries Purchased with Art Fund
and Leeds Art Fund support LEEAG.2022.0067

The Warrior’s Way: Safeguarding the natural history of Jamaica

2023, Graphite, Blue Mountain coffee, colour pencil, watercolour and ink on paper

British Museum, 2023,7004.1

Still Waters

2023, Terracotta, neoprene fabric, brass, copper, raffia palm, raw flax and tinctures

Courtesy of the artist

The Warrior’s Way: Seeds for cultivating the timeless

2023, Coffee, water-soluble graphite, pencil, watercolour and ink on paper

Courtesy of the artist

The Warrior Builds Strength: From all who came before

2023, Coffee, water-soluble graphite, pencil, watercolour and ink on paper

Courtesy of the artist

The Warrior’s Way: Honouring ancient traditions

2023, Coffee, water-soluble graphite, pencil, watercolour and ink on paper

Courtesy of the artist

The Book of Landscapes

(Livro da Paisagens)

Maria Floriza Veríssimo

2020 / 2024

Prints on Tyvek paper

Courtesy of Maria Floriza Veríssimo

Maria Floriza Veríssimo is a quilombola who lives in the Quilombo Ausente in the Municipality of Serro in Minas Gerais, in Brazil. Quilombos are settlements created by enslaved Indigenous and African people who escaped the plantation system that date as far back as 400 years ago. Hundreds of quilombos still exist and continue to be inhabited by enslaved people’s descendants and other low-income families. This installation presents 12 pages of her notebook about plants that grow in a communal creole garden by her home. The garden has sustained and nourished generations in their quest for liberation. Quilombos are a symbol of resistance, healing and autonomy, sustaining new structures of work and life away from the inhumanity of forced labour.

Daybreak – A Time to Rest

Jacob Lawrence

1967

Tempera on hardboard

National Gallery of Art, Washington, Anonymous Gift 1973.8.1

This painting is one in a series of panel paintings by Jacob Lawrence (1917 – 2000) that tells the story of abolitionist Harriet Tubman (1822 – 1913). Tubman founded the Underground Railroad, a fragile network of safe houses along the routes that allowed thousands of enslaved people to escape from Southern plantations to the Northern states of the USA. Plants found in the landscapes were fundamental during the escapes. Here, Tubman is pictured resting. She holds a rifle, lying on the hard ground beside a couple and their baby. The hard lines delineating her toes and muscles emphasise the arduous journeys she has made.

Umbanda

Maria Auxiliadora da Silva

1968

Oil paint on canvas

Museu de Arte de São Paulo Assis Chateaubriand

Gift Lais H Zogbi Porto e Telmo Giolito Porto in the context of the Afro-Atlantic Histories exhibition, 2018 — MASP.10732

Maria Auxiliadora da Silva (1935 – 74) depicted the everyday lives of Afro-Brazilians. This painting represents the Afro-Brazilian religion Umbanda, comprised of a combination of Spiritism, Shamanism, Catholicism and African religions. Enslaved people converted Catholic saints to their own pantheon of gods named orixás. At the rear of the temple, images of Saint Sebastian, the orixá of the forests and hunting, and Saint Lazarus, the orixá of health and healing, conceal the African and Indigenous traditions of Umbanda. Afro-Brazilian religions are, and continue to be, persecuted by the state. These hidden references protect their existence.

Voyage to Suriname. Description of Dutch possessions in Guiana

(Voyage à Surinam. Description des possessions néerlandaises dans la Guyane)

Pierre Jacques Benoit

1839

Early printed book with leather binding

Wellcome Collection, EPB/F/1006

An African song or chant from Barbados

Unidentified authors, transcribed by Granville Sharp from information provided by Dr William Dickson

Late 18th century, ink on paper

Courtesy of Henry Lloyd-Baker and Gloucestershire Archives, D3549/13/3/27

This song narrates the harsh treatment of enslaved people on a plantation in a direct message to their owners. It was transcribed by British abolitionist Granville Sharp (1735 – 1813) based on information from Scottish abolitionist Dr William Dickson (1751 – 1823), who heard the song while in Barbados. Storytelling through collective singing was an act of survival. Though forbidden to talk while working, enslaved people were permitted to sing in unison, as it was deemed productive by plantation owners and supervisors. Using rhythm and voice, songs contained coded meanings that preserved and shared knowledge and culture from generation to generation.

The Post-Plantation

The plantation economy has had ongoing consequences on people and the environment. Legacies of this system include disease, and polluted air and water. Today, racialised people are exposed to greater risk of harm from pollutants. This is known as “environmental racism”. New homes, corporations and agricultural fields have replaced former plantation sites, but exploitative and systemic practices such as forced, underpaid or unpaid work remain.

Investigative agency Forensic Architecture maps the contemporary industrial plants constructed on top of historic cemeteries of enslaved people who worked on sugar plantations in Louisiana in the USA. Their research traces the toxic impact of contemporary industry on the descendants of the enslaved people who worked on this land.

If toxic air is a monument to slavery, how do we take it down?

Forensic Architecture

2021

Digital video, 35 minutes 4 seconds

Courtesy of Forensic Architecture

Along the Mississippi River between Baton Rouge and New Orleans in the US state of Louisiana, a heavily industrialised ‘Petrochemical Corridor’ overlays a territory formerly known as ‘Plantation Country’. In the region’s majority-Black communities, residents – descendants of people historically enslaved on the same land – breathe some of the most toxic air in the country and suffer one of the highest risks of cancer and other serious health conditions, yielding the regional name ‘Death Alley’. As industrial development pollutes their air, it also threatens the burial grounds of their ancestors, exposing the continuum of environmental racism in the region. This project seeks to offer new tools to local residents and their allies to protect their history and future from industrial erasure, and to support their vision of a new cultural economy that honours the dead and uplifts the living.

Credits: Forensic Architecture Team

Project Coordinators: Imani Jacqueline Brown, Samaneh Moafi, Eyal Weizman

Project Supervision: Dimitra Andritsou, Olukoye Akinkugbe, Omar Ferwati, Ariel Caine, Kishan San, Nicholas Masterton, Nour Abuzaid, Sanjana Varghese, Ayana Enomoto-Hurst, Ana Lopez Sanchez-Vegazo, Caterina Selva, Jacob Bertilsson, Sam Blair, Robert Trafford, Elizabeth Breiner, Sarah Nankivell

Extended Team: Dr Salvador Navarro-Martinez (Imperial College London)

Collaborators: Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR), Center for International Environmental Law (CIEL), The Descendants Project, Earthworks, Healthy Gulf, Imperial College London, Louisiana Bucket Brigade, The Human Rights Advocacy Project (HRAP), Loyola New Orleans College of Law, The Ethel and Herman L Midlo Center for New Orleans Studies, Louisiana Museum of African American History, Whitney Plantation Museum

In partnership with RISE St James

Thanks to: Sharon Lavigne, August “AJ” Gomez, Milton Cayette, Chasity White, Jo Banner, Joy Banner, Jordan Brewington, Leon A Waters, Don Hunter, D Ryan Gray, Devin Ngetich, Mary N Mitchell, Ludovico Palmeri, Bryan C Lee, Jr, Jeremy Blum, Tammie Mills, Alahna Moore, Stephanie Cooper

Mosquito Shrine

(Templo do Mosquito)

Vivian Caccuri

2018

Mosquito net, cotton thread, aluminium and slate

Collection Adriana Varejão

In her work, Vivian Caccuri focuses on the figure of the mosquito, an insect that carries deadly infectious diseases. In the 16th century the mosquito was transported on slave ships from Africa to Brazil and has since spread across the Americas. In this embroidered work, mosquitoes take on a human scale, thriving in the human-made plantation landscape. In Brazil today, rapid deforestation has led to the return of yellow fever. Here, Caccuri invites us to reconsider our relationship with the mosquito, as an insect also affected by histories of colonialism.

Postage stamps promoting the World Health Organization’s Global Malaria Eradication Programme

1962 – 63

Stamps and envelope

Wellcome Collection, EPH718B (Pakistan 156), EPH713 (Dubai 39), EPH715 (Haiti 824), EPH714 (Gaza 120), EPH719A (Solomon Islands 341), EPH718B (Nigeria 116), EPH719A (Sierra Leone 241), EPH719A (Suriname 508), EPH719A (Sudan 167), EPH713 (Dominican Republic 853), EPH719A (Sharjah 22), EPH715 (Guinea 239), EPH715 (Guinea Republic 299), EPH713 (Dubai 34), EPH713A (Ethiopia 533), EPH714 (Somalia 460), EPH714 (Gabon 185)

The Prison

The mass incarceration system in the USA was informed by the model of the plantation economy. Today the USA has the largest prison system in the world, with a disproportionate number of racialised people imprisoned, particularly African American men.

In the 19th century, the British prison system was directly inspired by the American “separate system” – the principle of keeping prisoners in solitary confinement. Hard, unproductive work was used repeatedly for the sake of punishment and passing time, with direct consequences on the mental and physical health of incarcerated people.

More recently in the UK and the USA, private companies have utilised prison labour to produce and pack everyday goods. In the UK, prison labour earns an average wage of £4 per week per person, which can be used in privately run prison shops and canteens.

Prisons: Slave Ships on Dry Land

Andalusia K Soloff

2004 / 2024

Giclée print on paper

Courtesy of the artist

Poster for the Committee to Abolish Prison Slavery

Luis Gonzalez of the Royal Chicano Air Force

1977 / 2024

Giclée print on paper

Courtesy of the artist and the Center for the Study of Political Graphics

Jail is just a kind of warehouse for poor people

Peg Averill

1976

Lithograph poster

The Victoria and Albert Museum. Gift of the American Friends of the V&A; gift to the American Friends by Leslie, Judith and Gabri Schreyer and Alice Schreyer Batko. E.343-2004

Inmates at Work: prisoners harnessed to a wheel grinding or crushing rocks, surveilled by a guard

Captain Lewis

1870 / 2024

Giclée print on paper

© Science Museum Group, 1987-5180

Prisoners on a treadwheel at Pentonville Prison

Unknown author

1895 / 2024

Giclée print on paper

The National Archives, UK, COPY1-420

Woking Convict Invalid Prison: women prisoners working the fire pump

1889

Process print after Paul Renouard

Wellcome Collection, 37860i

Report of the Surveyor-General of Prisons on the construction, ventilation, and details of Pentonville Prison: Ground Plan of the Pentonville Prison for 520 Prisoners on the Separate System

Joshua Jebb

1844

Hardcover book

Wellcome Collection, EPB/B/25525

In the 19th century, the American model of the separate system was introduced to Britain and informed the construction of the HM Prison Pentonville, built in 1842 in Islington, London.
It was initially built with a capacity of 520 isolated cells. Communal spaces such as exercise courtyards and chapels were also separated to discourage social contact among prisoners, causing high rates of depression. Today, Pentonville is overcrowded, with over 1,200 prisoners.

Slide rule for calculation of treadmill labour

Robert Brettell Bate

1823

Wood, paper

Science Museum Group, on behalf of King’s College London,
1927-1526

The treadwheel was originally used to generate power for pumping water or manufacturing. In the 19th century it was used as a method of punishment, discipline and unnecessary productivity. This controversial tool enabled prison governors to set daily productivity targets for the number of steps per prisoner per hour. The slide rule encouraged prison authorities to adopt a more uniform system of treadwheel use, as the severity of labour practices varied greatly between prisons.

Site / Unseen: The Prison-Industrial Complex

Sheila Pinkel

1998 / 2024

Giclée prints on paper boards

Courtesy of the artist

No photography

This work is part of long-term research by prison activist and artist Sheila Pinkel, denouncing the growth of the mass incarceration system in the USA. In 2001, Pinkel found a catalogue of items made by prisoners in California prisons, ranging from utilitarian objects to office furniture. In some US states, universities and government offices are required by law to purchase equipment produced by low-paid prison workers. The work shows the proximity of prison labour to everyday life.

Looking Inside – Portraits of Women Serving Life Sentences

Sara Bennett

Clockwise from top left: Assia, Linda, Taylor and Elizabeth

2018 – 19 / 2024

Giclée prints on Hahnemühle paper

Courtesy of the artist

Sara Bennett is a former public defender who photographs women with life sentences to draw attention to the problems of mass incarceration in the USA, where over 200,000 people are serving life sentences. The women – all convicted of homicide – are documented at their place of work in prison. Sara Bennett asked the women, “What do you want to say to the outside world?” The portraits and accompanying words reveal the women’s experience and humanity, and challenge the viewer to think about the laws and policies that lock people up, sometimes for ever.

Personal growth and collective pockets of freedom on the inside

Chance Bleu-Montgomery

2024

Sound, 6 minutes 53 seconds

Courtesy of Chance Bleu-Montgomery

Chance Bleu-Montgomery was formerly incarcerated in London. In this recording, he narrates his personal journey of growth, inspired by his experience inside and outside of prison. He describes how he improved his and his peers’ living conditions, from cooking nutritious meals with very little, using DIY homeware, sharing recipes for food and drinks, to inventing ways of communicating while isolated in a cell. He describes how ingenuity and innovation can manifest themselves in the toughest moments in life. This motto has inspired his work as a social changemaker today.

Pain Relief Drawings

Ibrahim El-Salahi

2016 – 18

Pen and ink on the back of medicine packets

Courtesy of Ibrahim El-Salahi and Vigo Gallery

Drawn on medicine packets, these three drawings express the importance of meditative art-making to relieve Ibrahim El-Salahi’s chronic pain caused by sciatica and Parkinson’s disease. In 1975, he spent six months and eight days as a political prisoner at the Kober prison in Khartoum, Sudan, which holds colonial ties to Britain. While in prison, he drew on the paper bags that wrapped the food his family brought him. Drawing put him at risk of punishment or execution, but was an essential way for him to survive the isolation of imprisonment and ease his mental and physical chronic pain.

These recent drawings reference those El-Salahi made during his time in prison, and feature recurring symbols from his practice: a bird and tree that represent freedom, rebirth, personal growth and peace, coupled with Sufi spirituality.

The Street

Across the world, people go to work on our city streets. From street vendors to waste pickers to sex workers, the streets are industrious places but can be a precarious and unsafe place to work. Many of these jobs are part of unregulated economies and pose risks to workers’ health. And as urban development and gentrification rapidly transforms the built environment, their living and working conditions are impacted.

Street work is often unrecognised and unprotected within international labour laws but can benefit wider society and improve public health. Sanitation workers keep the streets clean but are often exposed to pollution and toxic materials, risking their individual health for the benefit of wider society. Meanwhile, in the UK, sex workers are placed at risk by the restrictions on how and where their work can take place. Criminalisation and stigma directly affect sex workers’ lives, including their access to healthcare and increasing their exposure to violence. The collective action and campaigns highlighted in this section have helped to elevate the voices of workers, brought visibility to their labour and improved their working conditions.

Street Life in London

John Thomson and Adolphe Smith

1877

Hardcover book

Wellcome Collection, ZOI.43.AA8

‘Street Life in London’ is an early example of social documentary photography. The aim of the book was “to bring before the public some account of the present condition of the London street folk, and to supply a series of faithful pictures of the people themselves”. The subjects include flower sellers, chimney sweeps, dustmen and locksmiths, as well as street doctors and public disinfectors.

London labour and the London poor: A cyclopaedia of the condition and earnings of those that will work, those that cannot work, and those that will not work

Henry Mayhew

1851

Hardcover book

Wellcome Collection, M16281

A street vendor selling an assortment of items

Unknown artist

1840

Gouache on mica

Wellcome Collection, 580799i

I Am a Man: Sanitation Workers’ Strike, Memphis, Tennessee, March 28th, 1968

Ernest C Withers

1968 / 2024

Giclée print on paper

© Dr Ernest C Withers, Sr, courtesy of the WITHERS FAMILY TRUST

The tragic deaths of Echol Cole and Robert Walker, who were crushed to death by a garbage truck while at work, sparked this historical strike in Memphis in the USA. Black sanitation workers weren’t allowed to join unions and suffered from poor treatment and unequal pay in contrast to their white counterparts. The placard held by the strikers became a symbol of dignity, freedom and resistance. The strike resulted in an agreement for the city to improve its working conditions.

Sweeping

Vikram Divecha

2016

Giclée prints on wooden boards

Courtesy of the artist and Sharjah Art Foundation

Sweeping was a daily artistic performance that Vikram Divecha developed with five migrant sweepers in Sharjah in the United Arab Emirates. Their daily routes were replotted so that they deposited a row of green rubbish-filled bags in front of the Sharjah Art Museum during their working hours. It drew attention to the dirt and the labour involved in sanitation work, while recognising the vital contributions of overlooked workers.

This map is made on a photocopy of the sector map of the Al Shuweihean neighbourhood, which surrounds the museum. Using a different coloured pen to represent each sweeper, the drawings trace the remapped routes. The images document the performance while highlighting their repetitive and low-paid labour, as well as moments of respite.

Made with the support of Bee’ah Sharjah Environment Company LLC
Participating Sweepers: Assainar Akkaparambil, Khayyum Shaik, Rafique Ahmed I Wagle, Altaf So Gulab Ali and Shaikh Afzal Shaikh
Inspector Assistant: Mohmed Babumiya
Sector Supervisor Waste Management:
Hussam Mohammed Faraj
Photography: Shanavas Jamaluddin and Vikram Divecha

Waste Superheroes

(Lxs Rifadxs de la Basura)

Women in Informal Employment: Globalizing and Organizing (WIEGO) in collaboration with Creatura

2023

Digital video, 14 minutes 42 seconds

Courtesy of the artists

While Mexico City’s solid-waste management system is unionised, at least 10,000 waste pickers are unpaid ‘volunteers’, relying on tips as they collect waste and recyclable materials to resell. Despite having no contracts or social protection, the government heavily relies on this free labour and profits from renting uniforms and tools to workers. Waste pickers put their own health at risk, a situation that worsened during the Covid-19 pandemic, to maintain their income and the health of residents and the city.

Djibouti: waste disposal and its effects on health

Islamic Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization

c. 2000

Colour lithograph poster

Wellcome Collection, 751899i

A woman carrying buckets of night-soil in Fuzhou, Fuijan province, China

John Thomson

1869 / 2024

Giclée print on paper

Wellcome Collection, 19725i

Prostitutes in Bern (Berne) being punished by collecting night-soil in the streets

Charles Turner Warren

c. 1790

Engraving

Wellcome Collection, 27974i

Prostitutes with their names and charges

Clockwise from top left:

Luci M, Betsy Ch, Flo A, Phy J, Mug, Sop, Cy, Elia F

After Wenceslaus Hollar

c. 1800 – 09

Etchings

Wellcome Collection, 27938i, 27939i, 27943i, 27941i, 27937i, 27944i, 27940i, 27933i

Prostitution in London: with a comparative view of that of Paris and New York, as illustrative of the capitals and large towns of all countries: and proving moral deprivation to be the most fertile source of crime and of personal and social misery: with an account of the nature and treatment of the various diseases caused by the abuses of the reproductive function: illustrated by numerous plates

Michael Ryan

1839

Hardcover book

Wellcome Collection, EPB/A/45278

Prostitution was often associated with lower-class women without social status. In this book, Michael Ryan consulted public hygiene reports, city maps and police files to demonstrate the immorality of sex work, with a focus on the spread of contagious disease. Taking a compassionate approach to men’s health, while associating sex workers’ bodies with depravation, the book reveals 19th-century society’s moral judgements on sex work and sex workers, which continue today.

Money Makes The World Go Round

Lindsey Mendick

2024

Glazed ceramic sculptures and tiles, ceramic decals, stained glass, sleeping bags, neon, reclaimed wood

Courtesy of the artist and Carl Freedman Gallery

Commissioned by Wellcome Collection

Money Makes The World Go Round is a new commission by artist Lindsey Mendick that honours a global history of sex work, revealing historical, contemporary, personal and collective narratives that too often remain unknown. 

Being heard is an ongoing and urgent demand for sex workers. This work has been developed through a process of listening and collaboration with SWARM members Juno and Polly and the author Mendez.

Two symbolic acts of resistance by sex workers formed the starting point for the work: the 1975 Saint-Nizier church occupation by over 100 sex workers in Lyon, France and the 12-day occupation of the Holy Cross Church in King’s Cross, London in 1982 by the English Collective of Prostitutes and their allies.

Here, the architecture of the church creates a shelter for community support and solidarity for global sex workers. The ceramic money boxes refer to the income that sex work provides – the predominant reason that people do this work. These ceramic sculptures, Mendez’s filmed sermon and the stained glass windows each refer to different histories of sex work from antiquity to today, celebrating those who continue to speak up for the existence, rights and struggles of sex workers.

Made in collaboration with: SWARM Collective members Polly Blake and Juno Mac and author and actor Mendez

Set Designer: Elouise Farley

Stained Glass: Claire Orme

Filmmaker: Guy Oliver

Lindsey Mendick’s Studio: Samuel Vilanova and Bryony Rose, HEKATE (Dominic Lauren, Vaso Papadopoulou, Aristea Rellou)

Scenic Painter: Zoé Parsons

Seamstress: Mum Mendick

Sistaaz of the Castle

Jan Hoek and Sistaaz Collective

2015 – ongoing / 2024

Giclée prints on dibond

Courtesy of the artist

This project is the outcome of an ongoing collaboration between the first South African trans sex worker support organisation SistaazHood, fashion designer Duran Lantink and photographer Jan Hoek. The Sistaaz are, in their own words, “fierce activists who are proud to be trans and sex workers”. Most workers in the SistaazHood collective are homeless, and live under a bridge near the Castle of Good Hope fort in Cape Town.

Gabby’s dream is to run a luxurious design brothel called Lady Marmalade and Joan Collins, the eldest member of the collective worked as a male nurse in the daytime and as a female sex worker at night. The series celebrate the Sistaaz’s lives, dreams and successes. They also recognise their struggles, as sex workers fight to access basic rights to healthcare, housing and other forms of work.

Self disgust in 100 percent humidity

Cassi Namoda

2022

Oil, charcoal and gesso on cotton canvas

Courtesy of the artist and Xavier Hufkens, Brussels

Sex Work Still Life

Hannah ‘Hanecdote’ Hill

2020

Textile with embroidery

Courtesy of the artist

Like an orgy, it only works if there’s a lot of us

United Strippers of the World

2018

Giclée print on paper

SWARM Collective/Bishopsgate Institute, SWARM/5/1

It is not illegal to buy or sell sex in the UK, but peripheral activities such as kerb crawling, managing sex work and soliciting in a public place are criminalised. The English Collective of Prostitutes (ECP) and Sex Workers Advocacy and Resistance Movement (SWARM) are UK activist collectives who work to highlight the dangers that sex workers are exposed to. They campaign for the full decriminalisation of sex work on the grounds of safety, public health and class and gender equality. These sex worker-led organisations provide support and resources to the sex worker community, including mutual aid, union support and legal advice for survivors of violence and exploitation in the sex industry.

ECP, Prostitutes: Our Life and Rights, 1981.

In 1982 the ECP led a 12-day occupation at the Holy Cross Church in King’s Cross, London, in protest against violent and racist policing that disproportionately targeted sex-working mothers. The group was part of a national, international and intersectional solidarity network that enhanced the campaign’s visibility and also included Andaiye, Guyana’s Working People’s Alliance, Labour MP Tony Benn and the lesbian organisation Sappho. Their work resonates with the SWARM collective, which, since 2009, has advocated for sex workers’ rights.

ECP, Photographs from the 12-day Holy Cross Church occupation in King’s Cross, London, 1985.

The Daily Star, Sanctuary, 19 November 1982.

The Sun, Masked vice girls take over church, 19 November 1982.

Conference for the launch of the book ‘Une Vie de Putain’ (‘Prostitutes, Our Life’) including Anne Neale, Wilmette Brown, Selma James and Ulla, a sex worker from the Lyon church occupation, France, 1980.

Protection of Prostitutes bill flyer, 1979.

Daily Express article about Maureen Colquhoun, the first openly lesbian MP, who presented the bill, date unknown.

ECP, ‘Guide to the Rules of the Game – A–Z for Working Girls’, 1981.

ECP, Leeds launch of ‘Guide to the Rules of the Game – A–Z for Working Girls’, Leeds, 1981.

ECP, Network newspaper, double issue Nos. 2 & 3, June 1984.

ECP, Three cartoons by ECP member Gigi Turner, 1984.

Bartle Bogle Hegarty (designer) for ECP, ‘Practising safe sex can get you arrested’ flyer, 1992.

The Independent, ‘Prostitutes put faith in posters’ article, 11 November 1992.

Photograph of Nina Lopez and Niki Adams, 1992.

ECP, ‘10 things police have said to sex workers’ flyer, January 2022.

ECP badges, 1980 – 90.

ECP protest in support of Lindi St Clair, taken to court for £100k unpaid taxes by Inland Revenue, Employment Appeal Tribune in St James’s Square, London, 1993.

ECP and Women Against Rape protest against the murder of 13 women by Peter Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper, 1981.

Metro, Sex hits red light in Soho protest, 9, March 2000.

The Guardian, Rupert Everett in defence of prostitutes: ‘There is a land grab going on’, January 2014.

ECP, Soho Fights magazine, 2019.

SWARM, Sex Workers’ Rights Festival poster, April 2024.

Juno Mac from SWARM

International Day to End Violence Against Sex Workers, London, 2021

‘Sex Workers’ march on International Women’s Day, 2018

International Women’s Day, London, 2024

International Women’s Day, London, 2020

Sex workers’ rights protest at the International AIDS Conference, including South African sex worker activist Dudu Dlamini from SWEAT (Sex Workers Education and Advocacy Taskforce) and activists from EMPOWER Foundation Thailand, Amsterdam, 2018.

English Collective of Prostitutes gather for a protest outside the Stop Porn Culture conference, London 2014.

TAMPEP, European Network for promotion of Rights and Health among Migrant Sex Workers, Migrant sex workers don’t ask for more, date unknown.

SWARM, Women’s Strike, Sex / Work Strike poster, 2019.

SWARM badges, 2018.

Courtesy of Bishopsgate Institute: SWARM/2/4/3, SWARM/2/6 and SWARM/3/13/1, SWARM/3/13/2, SWARM/3/13/4

Where and how sex workers do their job is under constant surveillance and risks penalties. This also extends to those who aren’t selling sex themselves. Between 1989 and the early 2000s, graphic designer Stickyboy promoted sex workers’ services in London by producing advertising cards to be placed in phone boxes. Like the sex workers who commissioned him, his work was criminalised and he was subjected to repeated charges from the police.

Sex worker advertising cards

1980s – 2000s, Printed paper

Wellcome Collection, EPH/ 596/:68, EPH/ 598/:161, EPH/ 594/:104; EPH/ 605/:27; EPH/ 595/:142; EPH/ 609 uncatalogued; EPH/ 607/:75; EPH/594/:54; EPH/ 596/:87; EPH/ 601/:95; EPH/ 595/:137; EPH/ 595/:82; EPH/ 595/:118; EPH/ 604/:133; EPH/609A/8

Sex worker advertising cards and personal papers

Stickyboy

1990 – 95, Printed paper

Wellcome Collection, PP/BOY/1

Typescript letter from Saint Pancras Borough Council to Hunter Street Police Station, subject line ‘Tottenham Court Road and Euston Station, Disorderly Women’, 25 November 1901.

C Barrett (?), Saint Pancras Borough Council, London

1901, Printed paper
The National Archives, UK, MEPO 2/293

Typescript letter from the Metropolitan Police to the City Police, Bristol, sent to accompany the Metropolitan Police’s ‘Album of Foreign Born Prostitutes and Associates’, 15 February 1937.

Metropolitan Police

1937, Printed paper
The National Archives, UK, MEPO 3/988

No one screws more prostitutes than the government. In 1990 prostitutes were fined £1/2 million

Bartle Bogle Hegarty (designer) for English Collective of Prostitutes

1992

Colour lithograph poster

Victoria and Albert Museum. Given by Bartle Bogle Hegarty.
E.450-1993

This large-scale poster was produced by the English Collective of Prostitutes in collaboration with the leading advertising agency Bartle Bogle Hegarty as part of the campaign to repeal the 1956 Sexual Offences Act and 1959 Street Offences Act. It exposes the hypocrisy of sex workers’ treatment by the criminal justice system, while boldly advocating for the existence of sex workers’ rights.

The Home

The home is a familiar and intimate space, and for some it is also a workplace.

Cleaning and domestic work are some of the most common and widespread occupations for migrant women workers across the world. Their work is often undocumented and unregulated, which puts them at risk of abusive and dependent working relationships with their employers. Organisations like The Voice of Domestic Workers provides education and community activities, campaigning for domestic workers’ rights in the UK.

Housework and childcare have long been constructed by society as women’s work. Women have been expected to stay at home to perform unwaged domestic tasks, while men take part in professional, paid work. Campaigns created in the 1970s recognised the extent of unwaged housework, time and the emotional and physical impact involved in caring work in the home. These powerful campaigns demanded recognition, equality and better working conditions for this essential work – and continue today.

Femme Maison

Louise Bourgeois

1984 / 2024

Giclée print on paper

© The Easton Foundation/VAGA at ARS, NY and DACS, London 2024; photograph © 2024 Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

This print is part of a major series called ‘Femme Maison’, which Louise Bourgeois (1911 – 2010) began in the mid-1940s while looking after her three young sons. In the work she explores women’s relationship with the domestic space. Depicting a woman whose head is trapped in a house while her nude body is revealed, Bourgeois presents the home as both an oppressive and exposing environment.

Washerwoman

Shannon Alonzo

2018

Beeswax, resin, brown cotton, wire, clothes pegs,
metal basin and water, found objects

Courtesy of the artist

Inspired by a portrait taken by the photographer J W Cleary in Jamaica in 1890, Shannon Alonzo produced this work in her grandmother’s house in Trinidad. She reflects on the hidden histories of her ancestors’ work as washerwomen and its impact on the body. The materials of the sculpture depict the effects of hot water and harsh soap on her hands, while the body’s decay mirrors the disappearance of the occupation itself.

Maids Rooms: La Encantada, Artadi Architects Maids Rooms: La Planicie, Doblado Architects

Daniela Ortiz

2012 / 2024

Giclée prints on Hahnemühle paper

Courtesy of the artist and Laveronica Arte Contemporanea

In a project that features over 16 homes, Daniela Ortiz compares the size of domestic workers’ rooms with other rooms in luxurious upper-class houses in Lima, Peru. Using complete construction plans from architectural magazines and the firms that develop these homes, the work outlines the reality of “service architecture”, the living space provided for domestic workers. Daniela Ortiz highlights the difference between the size of the rooms cared for by the domestic workers and the space in which they live. The work reveals the oppressive and colonial nature of the workers’ relationship with their employers, reinforced by the architect’s design.

‘The maid’s room’, Johannesburg, Transvaal (Gauteng), 24 July 1969

David Goldblatt

1969 / 2024

Giclée print on paper

 

Courtesy of the Goldblatt Legacy Trust and Goodman Gallery

These magazines, flyers, press releases, song, photographs and posters, featuring national and international voices, demonstrate the political and intersectional focus of the International Wages for Housework campaign (IWFHC) from the 1970s to today.

IWFHC and its autonomous organisations (Black Women for Wages for Housework, English Collective of Prostitutes, Wages Due Lesbians and WinVisible) revolutionised the recognition of unwaged caring work and led to the pathbreaking United Nations decision (at the 3rd and 4th World Conference on Women, Nairobi 1985, and Beijing in 1995) to measure and value women’s unwaged work in every country’s economic statistics. The materials show the breadth of their work, which includes gender discrimination, anti-racism, anti-deportation, health and environmental justice, mothers and other carers, women with disabilities, queer women, rape survivors, sex workers and domestic workers.

Wages for Housework New York flyer: notice to all governments, 1975.

Selma James, Women the Unions and Work and The Perspective of Winning, Falling Wall Press, 1972.

Wages for Housework Campaign badges, 1970s – 1980s.

Wages for Housework Campaign, Wages Due Song, Women Speak Out: May Day Rally Toronto, 1975.

Power of Women, Vol. 1, No. 1, Power of Women Collective. July / August 1974.

Power of Women, No. 5. Wages for Housework Campaign, 1976.

Race Today, Power to the sisters and therefore to the class, January 1974.

Wages for Housework Campaign, Taking What’s Ours, 1977.

Black Women for Wages for Housework, Safire, Vol. 1, No. 1, 1977.

Wilmette Brown, Black Women & The Peace Movement, Falling Wall Press, 1984.

Crossroads Audio Visual Collective, photograph of Clotil Walcott (1925 – 2007), founder of the National Union of Domestic Employees (NUDE), Trinidad and Tobago, date unknown.

Bringing It All Back Home conference flyer, Housewives in Dialogue, 1982.

Margaret Prescod speaking at launch of Black Women Bringing it All Back Home, 1980.

Selma James, Strangers & Sisters: Women,
Race & Immigration, Falling Wall Press, 1985.

Photograph of IWFHC delegation to Beijing Conference, Women Count – Count Women’s Work, 1995.

Measuring and valuing unwaged work, Beijing Conference, 1995.

Photographs at Women Count Delegation Press conference including from left to right: Andaiye, Anne Neale, Margaret Prescod, Selma James, Phoebe Jones, 1995.

Refusing Nuclear Housework, Wages for Housework Campaign, 1988.

Photograph of the End of Decade Conference with Krishna Ahooja-Patel from the International Labour Organization, Nairobi, 1985.

Crossroads Audio Visual Collective, photograph of panellists at Time Off For Women international conference: Discovering Women 1492 – 1992, left to right: Selma James (UK), Manju Gardia (India), Andaiye (Guyana), Sylvia Salley (Tlingit Nation, US), 1992.

The Pink Paper, ‘Caring not killing: Gay protestors lead the anti-war calls’, 2 November 2001.

Wages Due Lesbians, Policing the Bedroom and how to refuse it, Crossroads Books, 1991.

Queer Strike collective, Pride is a Protest: Pride, 2016.

Black Women for Wages for Housework and IWFHC joined the campaign against the PENTA 1 Trial (Paediatric European Network for the Treatment of AIDS), which trialled the use of the AZT drug in babies and children under 16, in the UK and Europe. Trials of the drugs were approved and led by the Medical Research Council (MRC) from 1987. This campaign demanded that the trials be stopped because they were conducted without the informed consent of the mothers, who were mostly of African descent and were threatened with deportation if they did not agree to take part. At the time, AZT was the only drug for the treatment of AIDS in Britain and was manufactured by Burroughs Wellcome Foundation.

The Weekly Journal, African babies in controversial Aids experiment article, July 1993.

Crossroads Audio Visual Collective, photograph of Nina Lopez at the Standing Conference on AZT Malpractice, June 1993.

Crossroads Audio Visual Collective, photograph of picket line at the Medical Research Council protest as part of the campaign against AZT, 1994.

Winvisible, two photographs from Disabled People Demand UK-wide protest in Parliament Square, 18 July 2024.

Payday Leaflet – Men are supporting the 2nd Global Women’s Strike, 2001.

Bouba Touré, photograph by Madjiguène Cissé, 30 March 1996, Paris.

Madjiguène Cissé, The Sans-Papiers: A Woman Draws the First Lesson, Crossroads Books, 1997.

Crossroads Audio Visual Collective, photograph of Selma James speaking at the International Pan African Women’s Day at Parliament Square Peace Camp, 31 July 2004.

These 19th-century handbooks were intended to teach women how to manage a household. Mrs Beeton’s book includes sections on Household Work, Servants’ Duties, Labour-Saving, Laundry Work and Etiquette. 

The Women and Work Hazards Group (WWHG) was a subgroup of The British Society for Social Responsibility in Science (1968–80s), a group of prominent and radical scientists who advocated for the ethical implementation of science. Working between 1977 and 1990, the WWHG tirelessly campaigned for the recognition of women’s health issues at work, whether in healthcare, factories, the office, or in the home. The group provided essential literature and advice in various magazines.

‘Disablement benefit: How it works’ in Hazards Bulletin 39

Women and Work Hazards Group, British Society
for Social Responsibility in Science

1984

Broadsheet

Wellcome Collection, S8092

‘Work and home hazards hit Black people hardest’ in The Daily Hazard, No. 10

The London Hazards Centre

1986

Broadsheet

Wellcome Collection, SA/BSR/B/14/3

Women’s Health in History Shift Work Health Hazards Health Hazards and Homework Home Helps Women and Work Hazards Group, British Society for Social Responsibility in Science

1977–90

Broadsheet

Wellcome Collection, SA/BSR/B/14/3, SA/BSR/B/14/2

The book of household mana­gement: comprising information for the mistress, housekeeper, cook, kitchen-maid, butler, footman, coachman, valet, upper and under house-maids, lady’s maid, maid-of-all-work, laundry-maid, nurse and nurse-maid, monthly, wet, and sick nurses, etc. etc. also, sanitary, medical, & legal memoranda with a history of the origin, properties, and uses of all things connected with home life and comfort.

Isabella Beeton

1861

Hardcover book

Wellcome Collection, M15444

Household engineering: scientific management in the home. A correspondence course on the application of the principles of efficiency engineering and scientific management to the every day tasks of housekeeping.

Christine Frederick

1919

Hardcover book

Wellcome Collection, K21926

Home nursing manual: with chapters on personal hygiene and care of infants

Cecil Frank Wightman

1912

Hardcover book

 

Wellcome Collection, K51207

Metal Handkerchiefs

Lubaina Himid

2019

Acrylic paint on metal

 

Courtesy of the artist and Hollybush Gardens

Reduce the Time Spent Holding

Magda Stawarska

2019

Digital audio composition, 8 minutes

Courtesy of the artist and Yamamoto Keiko Rochaix, London

These paintings are inspired by words found in British health-and-safety manuals combined with the patterns of East African Kanga fabrics. These manuals are intended to protect workers, but also to control them. For Lubaina Himid, this desire for regulation echoes British colonial control. In Magda Stawarska’s accompanying soundtrack, Himid echoes the manual’s words against a background of construction-work sounds.

Women of Ibis Batignolles

• Sore backs, sore feet, you have to pay! (tendinitis by Rachel Keke)

• Rubbing, rubbing, here you have to pay (picket line)

• Subcontracting means abuse (canteen ticket)

• Slavery, it’s over (ghosts)

Louise Rocabert

2020 / 2024

Giclée prints on paper

Courtesy of the artist

From 2019 to 2021, over 40 chambermaids at the Ibis Batignolles hotel in Paris went on strike to demand better working conditions and pay. These photographs document their long fight and highlight the collective action that led them to victory. Dressed in white sheets to represent their invisible labour, the women revealed injuries caused by repetitive physical work, and denounced the racial discrimination they faced.

No Rest for the Wicked

• Cleaner No. 01

• Three Generations of Work CV (Paid and Unpaid Labour)

• Cleaner No. 02

• Nana’s Back and Bra

• Cigarette Break

• Mum

• Domestic Labour Film Strip

Kelly O’Brien

2022 – ongoing / 2024

Giclée prints on dibond and woodchip wallpaper

Courtesy of the artist

In her work, Kelly O’Brien documents the working-class women in her family, playfully exploring the performance of low-paid cleaning work. Moving from intimate portraits to staged photography of her mother and grandmother, she also explores her own identity as a third-generation Irish immigrant. Concerned with class, politics and gender, O’Brien’s work questions the effect of work and working-class life on the body.

Our Journey

Dr Joyce Jiang

Tassia Kobylinska

The Voice of Domestic Workers

2019

Digital video, 16 minutes 13 seconds

Courtesy of the artists and The Voice of Domestic Workers

This participatory film was made with migrant domestic workers in the UK and documents the hard and exploitative work they endure in private homes across the country. Real-life testimonies are interspersed with hidden footage taken while at work. They are seen scrubbing the floor, hoovering, washing and cleaning repeatedly, exposing the exhausting nature of their work. ‘Our Journey’ also reveals the physical and psychological abuse they face. The Voice of Domestic Workers is an education and support group calling for justice and rights for migrant domestic workers in the UK.

Care Chains (Love Will Continue To Resonate)

Moi Tran

2024

Multimedia installation

Courtesy of the artist

Commissioned by Wellcome Collection

Please touch the table to experience the vibration

Each year over 23,000 people migrate to the UK to work as domestic workers in private households. ‘Care Chains (Love will continue to resonate)’ asks us to consider how giving care is more than just a physical act, but is one that requires emotional labour and compassion.

Care work impacts people’s lives in many ways, both physical and invisible, but also creates a resonance that connects people.

Moi Tran investigates the body as an instrument of communicating care. The installation features footage of 12 women who are domestic workers. Through their percussive body movements, they channel love, joy, healing, the release of tension and collective resistance. The multisensory installation uses synchronised film, light, sound and vibration to create a moment to reflect on universal practices of care.

Made in collaboration with:

Performers: Ann Margaret, Darleen, Florence Carol, Foulera, Georgina, Ghie Ghie, Grace, Lovely Joy, MayBelen, Sahara, Vangi, Yolly from The Voice of Domestic Workers with support from Marissa Begonia, Ximena Ruiz Del Rio, Louise Shelley, Dotty, Joy, Precious and Lhyne.

Co-composer / Co-workshop facilitator:
Natasha Lohan

Co-composer / trombonist: Rosie Turton

Co-composer / cellist: Zosia Jagodzinska

Sound design: Michael Picknett

Body percussionist: Emma King

Movement collaborator: Anouk Jouanne

Sound collaborator: Mengting Zhuo

Recording: Ricardo Barbosa, Marco Carini, Ben Harvey, Joshua Hurley, Ollie Isaac, Joshua McCrow, Justin Margovan, Michael Picknett, Thea Stevenson, Lewis Sellars and Antonina Stulova with programming by Lewis Sellars

Editing: Ricardo Barbosa

Costume design: Khanh Brice Nguyen with Maria Silva

Lighting design: Satu Streatfield, Paul Simson

Artist assistant: Adelina Hess