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Opportunity (Print)

Opportunity (Print)

Regular price $69.99
Sale price $69.99 Regular price
Save $-69.99 Sold out

This painting from Fabian Moore | IWMW Art & Media Studio captures a moment etched into the story of Black migration, labor, and legacy. A line of Black men waits outside a Ford plant looking for work. Each man carrying the weight of a dream bigger than the shift they hoped to earn.
Detroit was a beacon during the Great Migration, calling Black families north with the promise of steady wages and a chance to rewrite their futures. Ford was one of the first major automakers to hire Black workers in large numbers, and word of the $5‑a‑day wage spread like wildfire through the South.
But opportunity came with limits. Black men were often restricted to the most dangerous, exhausting, and least desirable jobs in the plant—foundry work surrounded by molten metal, the hottest and fastest stations on the line, heavy labor that broke bodies long before it built stability. Advancement was rare. Segregation shaped the shop floor as much as it shaped the city. 
This piece honors them—their courage, their endurance, and the unspoken brotherhood forged in the shadow of the assembly line. It’s a reminder that our history is not just about struggle, but about the relentless pursuit of possibility.
Regular price $69.99
Sale price $69.99 Regular price
Save $-69.99 Sold out

This painting from Fabian Moore | IWMW Art & Media Studio captures a moment etched into the story of Black migration, labor, and legacy. A line of Black men waits outside a Ford plant looking for work. Each man carrying the weight of a dream bigger than the shift they hoped to earn.
Detroit was a beacon during the Great Migration, calling Black families north with the promise of steady wages and a chance to rewrite their futures. Ford was one of the first major automakers to hire Black workers in large numbers, and word of the $5‑a‑day wage spread like wildfire through the South.
But opportunity came with limits. Black men were often restricted to the most dangerous, exhausting, and least desirable jobs in the plant—foundry work surrounded by molten metal, the hottest and fastest stations on the line, heavy labor that broke bodies long before it built stability. Advancement was rare. Segregation shaped the shop floor as much as it shaped the city. 
This piece honors them—their courage, their endurance, and the unspoken brotherhood forged in the shadow of the assembly line. It’s a reminder that our history is not just about struggle, but about the relentless pursuit of possibility.