Front of MuSE: A Community Museum
   

    MuSE: A Community Museum

    Hosted by the Center for Environment and Society, this public space in downtown Chestertown exhibits collaborations between students, faculty, staff, and the wider community.

    MuSE hosts rotating exhibits that highlight Washington College teaching, experiential learning, and research. Each exhibit will be informational, interactive, and highly visual, creating a dynamic community space for learning and sharing on the Eastern Shore.   

    MuSE is currently open on First Fridays from 4:30 pm to 7:30 pm, Saturdays from 10:00 am to 1:00 pm, and by request for groups. 

     

    Request for Proposal is CLOSED

    Request for Proposal

    Guidelines for a MuSE Exhibit

     

    Current Exhibits

    Kiplin Hall books

    The Wonders and Wanderings of Northern England

    Open: March  7 - July 26 . 

    The Wonders and Wanderings of Northern England exhibition explores the historical, literary, and environmental stories of Northern England, highlighting its connections with the state of Maryland. The exhibition was created by students that participated in the Kiplin Hall Exchange Program where students explore the intersection of landscapes, writers, and history of northern England.

    taxidermy duck in MuSE

    Chesapeake Changemakers

    Open: March  7 - July 26 . 

    Chesapeake Changemakers was created by students of the Fall 2024 Chesapeake Semester, a 16-credit program that combines intensive study, fieldwork, and outdoor adventure for a unique opportunity that fosters a powerful sense of place and gives students a better understanding of the human and social dimensions of environmental issues. The exhibition will feature biographical profiles of some of the diverse regional leaders the students meet on their Chesapeake Semester journey, alongside student-created visual journals, to present and preserve the stories of these individuals.

    Past Exhibits

    Three people talk in an exhibit at MuSE.

    Digital Scholarship in Museum Partnerships Program

    In the fall of 2023, the Digital Scholarship in Museum Partnerships Project was the first collaborative effort featured in MuSE, which hosted a collection of exhibits created by students from five museums in Kent County – Sumner Hall, The Waterman’s Museum, The Worton Point Schoolhouse, Betterton Heritage Museum, and Kent Museum. With the goal of preserving and providing greater access to the local histories of our community, the exhibition highlighted the mission of the space by providing digitized looks into each museum, viewable through virtual reality with 360-degree virtual tours, digitized collections, oral history interviews, and interactive panels.
    Students in Muse reviewing their journals and art

    Teaching & Transformation: Semester in the Chesapeake Classroom 

    Exhibit Dates: March 1 – July 27

    This exhibit showcased the nature and culture of the Chesapeake Bay region through the final projects created by Washington College's Chesapeake Semester students. Their hand-drawn maps and visual journals provided visitors a sense of the unique Chesapeake ecosystem, analyze solutions to environmental problems, and explored the nexus between science, policy, and people's everyday lives in the region. 

    Photo of Nest Alchemy gallery pieces and bird nests.

    Nest Alchemy

    Exhibit Dates: August 2  - December 14. 

    Nest Alchemy is a thought-provoking series created by Deirdre Murphy, a contemporary visual artist, who explores the intersection of art and science through the lens of natural patterns, data visualization and climate change. Her interest in avian migratory patterns and the effects of climate change have led her research to a variety of residencies, most recently with Washington College’s Center for the Environment & Society’s Foreman Branch Bird Observatory.

    Nest Alchemy investigates birds' nest throughout the four seasons and revels in the architectural wonders of the avian species. Murphy challenges the traditional assumption that nest building is a purely instinctual process by highlighting the learning and memory abilities of birds.