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Inside the worker-led push to unionize the Wexner Center for the Arts


Wexner employees Matt Reber, Miranda Inscho and Jo Snyder outside of the Wexner Center on the OSU campus. (Photo by Tim Johnson)

In August 2020, the Wexner Center for the Arts hosted an exhibition by visual artist LaToya Ruby Frazier. Dubbed “The Last Cruze,” the exhibit centered on pictures taken by Frazier of the union workers at a General Motors plant in Lordstown, Ohio, which was officially unallocated by the company and ceased production of the Chevrolet Cruze in 2019.

During these uncertain final months, Frazier spent long stretches in Lordstown photographing members of the UAW Local 1112. These images formed the crux of the exhibit at the Wex and were also compiled for a companion book, included alongside informational passages and one instructional section headlined “How to organize a union in your workplace.”

At the same time the Wex staged “The Last Cruze,” a number of its workers began to engage in early conversations about forming a union, motivated by long-standing issues further exacerbated by the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.



Read More: Inside the worker-led push to unionize the Wexner Center for the Arts