Exhibits
Vermont Folklife creates several exhibits a year through partnerships with local artists, researchers, and organizations, and using materials from our Archive.
Our exhibits travel statewide through a network of galleries and display spaces around Vermont with whom we partner. Some or all of many exhibits are also available online.
In-Person Exhibits
Find Vermont Folklife exhibits on display in galleries, museums, and libraries around around the state.
Vermont Folklife does not have its own gallery space and its offices are not open to the public, however our staff are actively working in communities across the state.
The Portrait of a Forest: Men and Machine documents how the forestry community continues to shape the land today and asks: What does it mean to be stewards of a working forest?
Ice Shanties is an exhibition featuring the structures, people and culture of ice fishing seen through the lens of Vermont-based Colombian photographer Federico Pardo.
St. Johnsbury Athenaeum from .
The Portrait of a Forest: Men and Machine documents how the forestry community continues to shape the land today and asks: What does it mean to be stewards of a working forest?
Interested in hosting a Vermont Folklife exhibit in your gallery, museum, or library?
Click the button below for a complete list of traveling exhibits and exhibit specifications.
Online Exhibits
Delve into Vermont Folklife Exhibits designed to be explored online.
In our words, in our community is a collaborative, public arts and humanities exhibit created by Vermont Folklife and photographer Macaulay Lerman, in partnership with the Champlain Valley Office of Economic Opportunity, that amplifies the voices of our neighbors experiencing the complex dynamics of homelessness, food insecurity, and economic challenges. This exhibit is guided by direct input from a group of Vermonters and the social service workers who aim to address their daily needs.
On display at the Brattleboro Museum and Art Center, 10 Vernon St, Brattleboro, VT 05301 June - October.
A physical and online exhibit presented by the Pride Center of Vermont and the Vermont Folklife Center. Curated by Meg Tamulonis of the Vermont Queer Archives. Through archival documents and ephemera, audio interviews and photographs Pride 1983 explores the origin and lasting legacy of Burlington, Vermont’s first Pride celebration on June 25, 1983.
In the second decade of the 21st century, we ask ourselves, to what extent can local actions bring about an economy that is just and equitable, an environment that is healthy and balanced and communities prepared to weather the disruptions of climate change?
Vivid photographs and audio interviews offering a diverse invitation to join the crowd or enter the ring of this high-energy, physical and performance-based brand of semi-pro wrestling.
Portrait of a Forest: Men and Machine documents how the forestry community continues to shape the land today and asks: What does it mean to be stewards of a working forest?
All Exhibits
Explore the wide range of topics which have been addressed in Vermont Folklife exhibits through the years.