The Brooklyn Historical Society and Food Bank for New York City are co-hosting a new photography exhibit that looks to shed light on hunger problems in the city.

Photojournalist Joey O’Loughlin made the “Hidden in Plain Sight” exhibit, for which she spent several years documenting the people behind the statistics of food insecurity.

One in five New Yorkers rely on food pantries and soup kitchens to eat, but O’Loughlin said she hopes her work can shatter the stereotypes about what kinds of people need help just to eat.

“There are people that you wouldn’t expect standing in food lines, people working one—sometimes two—jobs,” O’Loughlin said. “People who have been unemployed for a very long time and haven’t been able to regain their footing.”

The exhibit will be on display for the next year.

For more information on the exhibit, visit brooklynhistory.org, and for ways to help fight hunger in New York City, see foodbanknyc.org.