‘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.