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Forget Me Not: Memorial Practices in 19th-century Vermont, a talk by Ellery Foutch

  • Henry Sheldon Museum One Park Street Middlebury, VT 05753 United States (map)
Memorial Hair Wreath, 1835-55, detail. Collection of Henry Sheldon Museum. Created by Emma Adele Myrick with hair from of members of the Myrick and Russell families of Vermont. Photo: Jonathan Blake.

Memorial Hair Wreath, 1835-55, detail. Collection of Henry Sheldon Museum. Created by Emma Adele Myrick with hair from of members of the Myrick and Russell families of Vermont. Photo: Jonathan Blake.

In this talk presented via ZOOM, Professor Ellery Foutch will discuss memorial wreaths and mourning objects created in Vermont in the 1800s. Crafted from hair, fabric, and materials considered precious to the deceased, these artifacts offer a window into the lives and emotions of Vermonters of the past. Prof. Foutch is currently teaching a class on the material culture of hair and its meanings in American culture, past and present, working with students to research objects from Vermont collections and contemporary artists who use hair as a medium. Some of the hairwork examples are from the Sheldon Museum’s collection.

Ellery Foutch is an Assistant Professor in the American Studies department at Middlebury College, where she teaches classes on the art and material culture of the United States. She received her PhD in the History of Art from the University of Pennsylvania in 2011 and has held postdoctoral teaching fellowships at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and The Courtauld Institute of Art (London).  She is a Sheldon Museum trustee.

2021 marks the bicentennial of the August 15, 1821 birth in Salisbury, VT of Henry Luther Sheldon, the Museum’s founder. As a boy, Henry’s brother introduced him to collecting autographs, and his passion for collecting lasted a lifetime. Henry focused his collection on fine Vermont furniture, paintings, documents, household objects, and artifacts that provide a glimpse into Addison County and Vermont’s past. He opened the Museum, the oldest community-based museum in the US, in 1882. Thanks to his careful collecting of paper records which form the core of the Sheldon’s archives, we live in what one historian has called, “the best-documented community in America.”  Throughout the year, the Sheldon will present special exhibits and programs related to the extensive collections amassed by Henry. 

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Folded Love

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February 24

On His Own Resources: The Enigmatic Alexander Twilight, 1795–1857. A talk by Bill Hart.