Apply for Museum on Main Street, Smithsonian Exhibit: The Way We Worked 2011 – 2012
With their hands and minds hard at work and sweat on their brows, American workers perform a diverse array of jobs to power our society. Work is a part of nearly every American’s life. Office workers, factory workers, homemakers, truckers, soldiers and the millions more who keep the nation going through their work make great contributions not only to industry, but also to American culture.
The Way We Worked, adapted from an original exhibition developed by the National Archives, explores how work became such a central element in American culture by tracing the many changes that affected the workforce and work environments over the past 150 years. The exhibition draws from the Archives’ rich collections to tell this compelling story.
The exhibition will offer multiple interpretive opportunities for visitors through large graphics, along with relevant objects and work clothing. Through audio components, hear from workers their own stories about changes in their industries and confronting workplace challenges. Follow workers into their workplaces through films of various industries. Interactive components will introduce visitors to the experiences of multiple generations of families involved in the same work.
The exhibition focuses on why we work and the needs that our jobs fulfill. Our work takes place everywhere – on the land, on the streets of our communities, in offices and factories, in our homes, and even in space. An exploration of the tools and technologies that enabled and assisted workers also reveals how workers sometimes found themselves with better tools, but also with faster, more complex and often more stressful work environments. The diversity of the American workforce is one of its strengths, providing an opportunity to explore how people of all races and ethnicities identified commonalities and worked to knock down barriers in the professional world. And, finally, the exhibition shows how we identify with work – as individuals and as communities. Whether you live in “Steel Town, USA” or wear a uniform each day, work assigns cultural meanings and puts us and our communities in a larger context.
How to Apply: Applications for The Way We Worked should be submitted to the Missouri Humanities Council by October 15, 2010 (postmarked or emailed). Tours for the exhibit begin in the fall of 2011 through summer 2012.
Note: The application is available online at www.mohumanities.org. If you do not have internet and email access, please contact the Missouri Humanities Council office at 1.800.357.0909 or email: mailto:mail@mohumanities.org to make other arrangements for submission of materials.
For more information on Museum on Main Street – Smithsonian Exhibit visit www.museumonmainstreet.org or www.si.edu. The Way We Worked is curated by Dr. Bruce Bustard, Senior Curator for the National Archives and Records Administration.
Also in this issue
- MO Passages Continues to Evolve- A Message from the Executive Director
- Canvas Covered Enlightenment: The Ongoing Story of the Chautauqua
- Why the Journey
- Investing in Your Child’s Vocabulary-Family Reading
- Journey Stories Makes its First Missouri Stop in Walnut Shade
- Apply for Museum on Main Street, Smithsonian Exhibit: The Way We Worked 2011 – 2012
- Sharing Missouri Stories










mail@mohumanities.org