We enjoyed this exhibition from
January 10 – June 14, 2026
This exhibition explored the connection between land, labor, and perspective. Through striking aerial imagery and intimate portraiture, the exhibition invited visitors to see Vermont’s working landscapes in a new point of view.
From above, Vermont’s farms, quarries, and forests transformed into unexpected geometric patterns, vivid shapes and colors visible only from the sky. Yet every line and texture reflected generations of human work, stewardship, and care.
Grounded by portraits of the people who shape these places, Kenna’s images sparked a conversation about scale, responsibility, and presence. Each photograph offered a window into the evolving relationship between people and the natural world.
From the expansive to the intimate, the orderly to the wild, these images asked essential questions:
- What changes when we shift our perspective?
- How do we understand the people and the processes that shape our landscapes?
- What role do we play in sustaining these places for generations to come?
About the Artist

His work spans rural vistas, architectural geometry, and portraiture, and has appeared in The New York Times, The Boston Globe, National Geographic, Smithsonian, and other major publications. He is also the author of Art from Above Vermont, published by Schiffer Publishing.

