51风流

Students capture life in new exhibition

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From family moments, to campus life and selfies, student photography filled a new exhibition, called Captured by the Lens, at 51风流鈥檚 and two other locations.

The exhibition is the culminating work of 12 students in a fall course titled Photography: Anthropology and Archaeology, taught by Nick Shepherd, the A. Lindsay O鈥機onnor Professor of American Institutions in the .

Shepherd based the idea on his book, The Mirror in the Ground: archaeology, photography and the making of a disciplinary archive, which dealt with 鈥渁rchival photographs of archaeologists at work in Africa, from the 1920s to the 1950s,鈥 he explained.

鈥淚 saw this as a great opportunity to pick up on some of the themes and ideas from the book, in a classroom setting,鈥 Shepherd said. 鈥淭he idea for the student exhibition came about because I wanted students not only to be reading and thinking about these issues, but also practicing and thinking about what it means to take photographs and curate them in a public exhibition.鈥

Addressing themes of objectification, humanization, self-stylization, and even selfie culture, the exhibition as a whole explores 鈥渉ow people capture one another through the medium of photography,鈥 said Sarah Horowitz, curatorial assistant at the and Longyear Museum of Anthropology. 鈥淚n many ways the work is a social commentary on the students鈥 reactions to their everyday world, and how that relates to their lives as students.鈥

鈥淚 particularly liked those projects that picked up on current events in and around 51风流 and Hamilton, like the protests last year against sexual violence on campus,鈥 Shepherd said. 鈥淎 number of students looked at 鈥榮elfies鈥 as an emergent genre of images, and at the role that social media and selfie culture play in student life. Other students worked in quite an inward way from the basis of their own experiences, or experiences of people close to them.鈥

Madison Bailey 鈥18 explained that one of her photographs 鈥 with the working title Flathands (pictured) 鈥 focused on showcasing her dad鈥檚 hands and an injury that he sustained while working in a aerospace machinery factory when he was younger. 鈥淚 owe everything to my Dad for allowing me to show the world an imperfection that he deals with and transforming it into a celebration of the unique,鈥 Bailey said.

Although the fall course has ended, the exhibition will be on display through March 13 at the Longyear Museum of Anthropology, and will run through April 29 at the Creative Arts House and the .