The New York Times recently asked readers to submit pictures of the recession for their piece, Picturing the Recession. Photographers from all over the world submitted photographs showing how the world wide economic crisis was hitting home. There are pictures of swap meets in Bangladesh, pictures of the stunted housing boom in Australia, pictures of all sorts of businesses closing shop. There are even pictures of 99 cent stores liquidating assets for 69 cents.
The compilation is really quite amazing. I never feel like I can really understand the scale just looking at my town and what businesses are failing here. Seeing the stores fold over and over and over again helps show what is happening in more broad context, regionally, nationally, internationally.
The pictures show more than just desolation. They show cultural shifts, people starting their vegetable gardens, people beginning to raise backyard chickens for eggs, and people baking bread at home with a copy of Michael Pollan’s book “The Omnivore’s Dilemma” hanging out in the background. People who are essentially trying to survive by reclaiming their food from the food industry.
Photographers who feel inspired can still try to submit photos to the NYT here. And of course there is a flickr group gathered to share photos based on the recession, the Economic Clusterf*ck (aka Recession) of 2008-9.


Wow, so many of those photographs chronicle my life right now. The one with the cat and the photographer commenting that she spends so much time with her pets during the day. The little home gardens, I am planting mine right now–its a big experiment because I have never gardened before. I trade extra cans of tuna from the food bank with a friend for eggs from her chickens. I know they are calling this a recession, but it feels worse than that for me.
I hear that, Sara. Good luck on the garden, I heard it is one of those practice, practice, practice things, and lots of groups in portland that are all about taking back the lawn. It definitely feels like famine though. Looking at CL is the shit right now, all the jobs that are based on sales and leads, the sucker market.
Just last week day I was passing the Famous Apollo Theater and noticed a “recession special”: dinner and show for two for $49.95. Not bad, really.