Just One Word: Plastics
By Steve Bennett | July 30, 2020
We’re all getting used to paying for just about everything with plastic these days and transacting with people behind plexiglass “sneeze guards.” (I’ve used a total of $7 in cash since early March 2020). Plastic isn’t just in our wallets–it’s become the common stuff of PPE large and small. Here are some images from my travels about town as businesses started reopening this spring. Plastic is pretty prominent.
WALLS OF PLASTIC
The proprietor of a convenience store in North Cambridge took the sneeze guard concept a step further, shrouding his entire counter in heavy plastic sheeting with a flap for passing goods back and forth.
Convenience store in North Cambridge, MA –taking the spit guard concept to a new levelDitto for the front desk of Judy Jetson Hair; all transactions are done through the plastic slot.
PLASTIC FOR CLOSE-UP WORK
Initially I saw a lot of face shields when businesses were re-opening. Gary Drinkwater, owner of Drinkwater’s Cambridge, uses a plastic face shield when doing close-up measuring for alterations and fit. (This was a dry run before the grand reopening. Gary measures a store employee. Gloves would be worn for actual business).
At Chalawan restaurant, opening day was marked with…. plastic. The server and individual packs of plastic cutlery were wrapped in…plastic.
PLASTIC FOR THE TRULY CAUTIOUS
And on the street, I bumped into a fellow wearing safety glasses, face shield, and mask (exam gloves, too). He was on his way to the supermarket. When I asked why he was taking the extra precautions, he said he was concerned about keeping his mother safe. Good son.
Just one word: plastics… perhaps the 1967 movie The Graduate was prescient….
Steve Bennett is a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based visual artist. He began taking photographs more than 40 years ago, in the age of film, and transitioned to digital photography in the late 90s. Today, in addition to taking and making traditional street, macro, and landscape photographs, he creates photo-based abstract composites designed to take viewers on fanciful flights of the imagination through virtual realms. His work has been displayed in numerous juried exhibitions, and at Google’s Kendall Square, Cambridge offices as well as various technology, biotech, and financial service companies in the Boston area.