David Plowden’s Iowa is on view at the Sioux City Art Center from May 4 through September 20, 2026, presenting a sustained meditation on the state’s rural character. Comprising sixty-four black and white photographs made over four decades, the series traces barns weathered by wind, solitary grain elevators rising above flat horizons, rail lines cutting across open fields, and storefronts that hint at busier days. The cumulative effect is neither sentimental nor severe. Instead, the work unfolds with steadiness, allowing Iowa’s agricultural landscapes and small towns to speak in their own measured tones.
David Plowden rarely includes figures, and their absence shapes the tenor of the images. Streets appear momentarily paused, farm structures stand in quiet endurance, and abandoned buildings suggest stories that continue beyond the frame. Without overt commentary, he records what stands before him—carefully composed, attentive to texture and light. The photographs feel familiar yet faintly estranged, as though memory itself has been distilled into wood siding, corrugated metal, and long stretches of highway. Change is present throughout, but it resists easy narratives of improvement or decline.
Born in 1932, David Plowden has devoted his career to documenting the evolving American landscape. A Guggenheim Fellow in 1967 and the author of more than twenty books, he has photographed bridges, trains, industrial sites, and vernacular architecture across the United States and the United Kingdom. His approach aligns with a documentary tradition that values clarity and craft, emphasizing large-format precision and richly detailed gelatin silver prints. Historian David McCullough once described him as an American treasure, a testament to the breadth and integrity of his vision.
Originally organized by Humanities Iowa, this exhibition forms a portrait that is at once regional and universal.
David Plowden’s Iowa invites viewers to consider what endures in the built environment and what quietly disappears. In these restrained compositions, the landscape becomes a record of collective habits and aspirations—an unadorned chronicle of place that lingers long after one steps away.
Image:
David Plowden - Sherman Township, Calhoun County, 2024
Gelatin silver print
14 x 14”
© David Plowden