Photographer/Ethnographer Ned Castle Joins Vermont Folklife Center Staff

Ned Castle is joining the Vermont Folklife Center staff as a Digital

Media Instructor for the Center’s Discovering Community* *School

Outreach Program to K-12 schools. Castle is an extraordinary documentary

photographer whose first major exhibit, “In Their Own Words: Stories

from Refugees Settled in Vermont Communities,”

http://their-own-words.org was produced in partnership with the

Vermont Folklife Center’s Vision & Voice Documentary Workspace.

Subsequent exhibit projects—“Indigenous Expressions” at the ECHO Museum

and Science Center and the HIGHLOW Project that is currently touring

statewide—have met with great critical acclaim.

Castle’s approach to photography mirrors the Vermont Folklife Center’s

research process in the sense that both strive to understand—and

portray—another person’s story from their perspective and on their

terms. As Ned observes, “I am a storyteller and photography is my voice.

While the quality of my photography is based in part on technique and

aesthetic sensibility, I believe that my relationships with people and

their worlds are what gives me an effective hand at creating images.”

(http://nedcastle.com/)

The Center’s Discovering Community Program

(http://www.discoveringcommunity.org/) which Castle is joining, equips

students with the skills to discover the distinctive character of their

hometowns by engaging the stories of family, friends, and community

members. The Program draws on concepts from ethnographic research to

develop students’ capacity for deep listening and to use digital media

to tell people’s stories collaboratively and responsibly.

For more information about this and other Vermont Folklife Center

programs and services, visit our Web site at

www.vermontfolklifecenter.org or

call (802) 388-4964.