How We Worked
"Chicago was still the city of broad shoulders, a place where men worked with their hands, and a place where the blues had some meaning."
– Jonathan Eig
The diversified economy of Chicago prevented it from falling victim to issues that deeply impacted other Rust Belt cities. As poet Carl Sandburg famously put it in 1914, its title as “Hog Butcher for the World, Tool Maker, Stacker of Wheat, Player with Railroads and the Nation's Freight Handler" had evolved. Chicagoans worked and scraped to survive, finding new ways to utilize their skills. At the zenith of the dot-com boom, the availability of venture capital and the rise of the internet in 2000 led to the creation of many new companies, most of which were adversely affected when its bubble later burst. CITY 2000 captured these new businesses and ones that have always been part of the fabric of Chicago. It chronicled the beauty in Chicagoan labor, reshaping everyday moments into captivating ones.
As Chicago is a union city, many photographers followed strikes and protests. The Work-Ship Coalition, Janitorial Agencies, SAG, and AFTRA all fought to improve their working conditions in 2000. Chicago has always been a city that worked, whether it be towards a job or towards change. The diversity of professions and skills among its residents has shaped Chicago into the multifaceted city it is today.
The CITY 2000 photographers recorded workers of many professions: shoemakers, seamstresses, hair stylists, grocers, and newspaper salesmen are all included. They went up on a construction crane high above Streeterville, to the Chicago Skyway toll booth, to the IBM building, and visited the Chicago Board of Trade. They mingled in local bars, shopped at street markets, and shadowed factory foremen, capturing the essence of how Chicagoans lived and worked at the turn of the millennium.
Scroll down to see a selection of photographs that explore "How We Worked." Clicking on any image will open its "media file" page, click the x in the top right corner to close the image and return to this exhibit page.
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- Work-Ship Coalition Protesters
- SAG and AFTRA Protesters
- Construction Worker Having Lunch
- Alcala's Western Wear
- Selena's House of Beauty Stylist
- Janitors Strike Protesters
- Fulton Market Butcher
- Mechanic
- Wigs by Mary
- Foremen at Finkl Steel
- WMAQ Preparation
- Chicago Board of Trade Trading Floor
- Seamstress
- Bank of America
- Humboldt Park Grocers
- School Janitor
- Salesman
- Manny's Chef
- Wienermobile Employees
- Mi Tierra Waitresses
- Veteran Pilots
- Waitresses at Soul Queen restaurant
- Longshoremen
- Optimo Hat Shop