Student Impressions: David Plowden
Our recent retrospective on the photography of David Plowden urged visitors to reflect in a nuanced way on connections between people and across time. Some Middlebury students did exactly that.
The Middlebury College Museum of Art is the largest learning laboratory on campus and a vibrant cultural hub in the local and regional community. Our expansive collections and diverse temporary loan exhibits provide opportunities for all visitors to be engaged and inspired.
Our recent retrospective on the photography of David Plowden urged visitors to reflect in a nuanced way on connections between people and across time. Some Middlebury students did exactly that.
This spring students in Sarah Rogers’s History of Photography course were given an assignment: choose one photographic work on display at the museum, assume a first-person perspective—the photographer, the subject of the photograph, or someone on site—and narrate what you imagine to be the experience of being there in the photograph. Use specific details to craft a narrative that draws in the reader and makes the photograph come alive as the moment might have been experienced on site.
Several students in the course chose to write about photographs from our exhibition David Plowden: Portraits of America.
The museum serves as an integral educational and cultural component of Middlebury College yet also seeks to enrich the larger educational and cultural environment of Vermont.
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