Observing Vermont Architecture
January 7—March 23, 2014

For immediate release: 12/19/13
For further information contact: Glenn Andres, Professor of History of Art and Architecture, at andres@middlebury.edu or (802) 443-5226

Middlebury, VT—On Tuesday, January 7 the Middlebury College Museum of Art will open an exhibition dedicated to the state’s buildings. Observing Vermont Architecture features some one hundred photographs by Curtis B. Johnson selected to accompany the newly published Buildings of Vermont co-authored by Johnson and Glenn M. Andres. Curated by the authors, the exhibition celebrates an architectural heritage that has made Vermont the only state in the Union to be designated in its entirety as a national treasure by the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Beyond Vermont’s famously wonderful and evocative meeting houses and barns, its villages, cities, and landscapes present a remarkably intact and comprehensive  microcosm of the American building experience from revolutionary times to the present. Major national and regional architects and talented master builders have drawn upon the state’s abundant building materials—wood, stone, brick, marble, slate, and granite—to create structures in high style as well as regional vernaculars. The buildings may be more modest in scale and pretension than those found elsewhere, but they are of no lesser quality, and they and their settings  are often better preserved. They represent technical limitations and innovations, and they chronicle social and economic developments. Mainstream or idiosyncratic, they also embody a story of Vermont’s regional values, cultural imagery and  local ambitions.

The study from which they have been drawn is part of a national series, The Buildings of the United States, sponsored by the Society of Architectural Historians. Twenty years in the making, it represents a culling of some forty thousand buildings on the State and National Registers to arrive at approximately six hundred and fifty examples that can tell the built story of the state from its earliest days to the present.  They have been selected to represent Vermont’s every region, historic period, and genre of building—from the grand to the humble.

Glenn M. Andres is professor of history of art and architecture at Middlebury College, a long-time member of the Vermont Advisory Council for Historic Preservation, and author of A Walking History of Middlebury and articles and exhibitions on Vermont builders and buildings.

While a member of the staff of the Vermont Division for Historic Preservation, Curtis B. Johnson edited state-published volumes on the historic architecture of Rutland and Addison Counties. Also a professional photographer, his images for the book provide a close and accurate visual exploration of the design of individual buildings and  offer an appreciation of the character and changing moods of these noteworthy  structures.

On Tuesday, January 14, Andres will discuss the exhibition in an illustrated lecture at 4:30 p.m. in Room 221 of the Mahaney Center for the Arts (MCA). On Thursday, January 23, Johnson will offer an illustrated lecture and gallery talk, titled “Photographing Vermont’s Architecture,” at 4:30 p.m. in Room 125 and the Museum, both located in the MCA.

Observing Vermont Architecture will remain on view in the Museum’s Overbrook Gallery through Sunday, March 23.

The Middlebury College Museum of Art, located in the Mahaney Center for the Arts on Rte. 30 on the southern edge of campus, is free and open to the public Tues. through Fri. from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and Sat. and Sun. from noon to 5 p.m. It is closed Mondays. The museum is physically accessible. Parking is available in the Mahaney Center for the Arts parking lot. For further information and to confirm dates and times of scheduled events, please call (802) 443–5007 or TTY (802) 443–3155, or visit the museum’s website at museum.middlebury.edu.