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  • Robert S. Neuman: Selected Works from 1950-1979

    Clark Gallery

    By: Clark - May 23rd, 2026

    Clark Gallery presents Robert S. Neuman: Selected Works from 1950-1979. This retrospective chronicles Neuman’s most formative decades as an artist, as unabashedly bold color and the human experience became the cornerstones of his artistic practice.

  • Summer at the Naumburg

    Wonderful Free concerts in Central Park

    By: Susan Hall - May 21st, 2026

    This year's edition, the 121st season, runs June 9 through August 4, 2026 with five spectacular programs featuring world-class ensembles and soloists at the historic Naumburg Bandshell in Central Park (mid-park at 72nd St.). Concerts begin at 7:30 p.m., no reservations are needed. All will be broadcast live and streamed on WQXR for those unable to attend in person. Visit naumburgconcerts.org for more information and programs

  • Ed Andrews: Ball of Confusion

    Boston Sculptors

    By: BSC - May 21st, 2026

    A new interactive sculpture entitled Rook anchors the exhibition, inviting viewers to select geographic locations of their choice, while the piece responds by providing the live weather conditions of that location, and translates temperature and wind speed into shifting patterns of color, light, and motion. Blending sculpture, technology, and environmental data, Rook transforms atmospheric information into a continuously evolving visual experience shaped by an invisible network of global systems.

  • Photographer Carl Chiarenza at 90

    Was First American to Earn a PhD on a Living Photographer

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 18th, 2026

    At Boston University I monitored the lectures and seminars of Carl Chiarenza. Anything I know about photography derives from him. More than a professor, as he was to many, Carl was a mentor and friend. Over the years I have posted about his publications and exhibitions. His impact on the field is unprecedented. Often he made his points with ironic insight and humor.

  • Call It In the Air

    Sheer InsanityLondon 1982

    By: Greg Light - May 18th, 2026

    Our readers are familiar with Greg Light as one half of the the Parisian dishwashers. Here is the first chapter of a new novel.

  • Summer at Clark Art Institute

    Full Schedule of Events

    By: Clark - May 18th, 2026

    The Clark Art Institute announces its summer 2026 events lineup, encouraging visitors to engage with art and nature both inside the galleries and on the grounds. Featuring talks and tours, nature programs, performing arts events, family programs, and special events connected to our summer exhibitions and renowned permanent collection, there is something for all ages

  • Heartbeat Opera Punches Up Vanessa

    Samuel Barber's Opera in Shadowy Chamber Form

    By: Susan Hall - May 18th, 2026

    Samuel Barber’s Vanessa is playing at the Baruch Performing Arts Center after a smashing run at the Williamstown Theatre Festival last summer. R. B. Schlather, also of Hudson Hall, directs: Hot sex in a cold clime. This story was originally told in veils and mirrors, which have been translated into shadows by Heartbeat Opera.

  • Alec Baldwin at Tanglewood

    Premiere of Philip Glass Symphony

    By: BSO - May 15th, 2026

    Award-winning actor Alec Baldwin will narrate the Boston Symphony Orchestra’s performance of Aaron Copland’s Lincoln Portrait on Sunday, July 5 at 2:30 p.m. in the Koussevitzky Music Shed. The award-winning actor and classical music enthusiast joins a special Independence Day weekend program that features two other Lincoln-inspired works. The centerpiece is the world premiere of Philip Glass’ Symphony No. 15.

  • Venice Theatre Season

    Hurricane Damaged Jervey Theatre Reopens Early 2027

    By: Jay Handelman - May 16th, 2026

    For Venice Theatre, reconstruction of its hurricane-damaged mainstage Jervey Theatre “influenced every decision” that was made about show selection for the 2026-27 season, said Interim Artistic Director Murray Chase.

  • Ringling's Art of Performance Series

    Ringling's Art of Performance Series

    By: Carrie Seidman - May 16th, 2026

    The lineup for the eclectic performing arts program epitomizes the vision of The Ringling’s first director, Everett “Chick” Austin, who believed a museum’s role was not to simply be a repository for gilt-framed Old Masters, but a living, dynamic space where all art forms intersect to stretch patrons’ palates, minds and imaginations.

  • Goodspeed Opera House Rocks

    Fine Production of Jesus Christ Superstar

    By: Karen Isaacs - May 13th, 2026

    As expected, this is a very good production of the show; Justin Matthew Sargent, the lead, has played the role before, including as a stand-in for John Legend during rehearsals of the television live television production. His experience shows not only in the vocals, but also in the interpretation of the role. His Jesus is gentle, determined, but also scared.

  • Death of Classical Previews the Met Opera

    Missy Mazzoli and Gabriela Lena Frank Featured in Underworld Venues

    By: Susan Hall - May 10th, 2026

    Death of Classical is a spunky classical music producer that takes performers and audiences into strange and wonderful spaces, where they enjoy whiskey, burgers, and music. In the past week, the composers of  two upcoming productions of the Metropolitan Opera have been previewed.

  • Leadership Changes for Berkshire's WAM Theatre

    Erin Patrick Now Managing Director at WAM.

    By: WAM - May 12th, 2026

    The Board of Directors of WAM Theatre, in partnership with Artistic Director Genée Coreno, announces a leadership transition as Managing Director Molly Merrihew steps into the role of Executive Director at Shakespeare & Company. WAM Theatre is proud to promote General Manager Erin Patrick into the role of Managing Director at WAM.

  • Florida Studio Theatre Leadership Changes

    Artistic Director Since 1980 Richard Hopkins Retires

    By: Jay Handelman - May 12th, 2026

    FST leaders preparing for long-planned retirement and evolution. Richard Hopkins has served as producing artistic director since 1980 and will retire after helping to transition in new leaders.

  • Manship Artists Residency

    Honoring Poet Charles Coe

    By: Rebecca Reynolds - May 12th, 2026

    Perhaps you knew Charles personally, or you encountered his work at readings and through conversations across Massachusetts and beyond. You may not be aware, but as one of our earliest residents at Manship, one with a past at the Mass Cultural Council, Charles helped shape the residency at a formative moment in our history.

  • Mohawk Trail Concerts

    Telegraph Quartet at Charlemont Federated Church

    By: MTC - May 12th, 2026

    On Saturday, June 20, 2026 at 5pm, the Telegraph Quartet (Eric Chin and Joseph Maile, violins; Pei-Ling Lin, viola; Jeremiah Shaw, cello), a group The New York Times describes as “full of elegance and pinpoint control” is presented by Mohawk Trail Concerts. The performance will be held at Charlemont Federated Church (175 Main St.).

  • Arts Leader Ted Landsmark

    Served on MFA Board and Chaired ICA's

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 08th, 2026

    Ted Landsmark (born May 17, 1946) overcame poverty, childhood polio, and daunting obstacles to forge a distinguished career with many singular accomplishments. He served on numerous boards including the MFA and ICA.

  • The Steinberg/ATCA New Play Awards

    Largest Playwriting Award in the United States.

    By: ATCA - May 06th, 2026

    The Steinberg/ATCA and Osborn Awards were presented by Cameron Kelsall, chair of ATCA's New Play Committee, and Lou Harry, vice-chair of ATCA's Executive Committee, alongside Jim Steinberg of the Harold and Mimi Steinberg Charitable Trust.

  • Dishwasher Dialogues If You Live Long Enough Life Ends

    Ashes in the Columbarium

    By: Greg Light and Rafael Mahdavi - May 07th, 2026

    The Chez Haynes years were forty-five years ago. That’s nearly half a century. We all had dreams, the waitresses and you and I. And we all had vague plans, and we pursued them in Europe and later in America. Most of us went back to the U.S.

  • Met Gala

    By: Charles Giuliano - May 05th, 2026

    Zing sing bling goes my heart on the red carpet.

  • Works by Jeffrey Marshall & Alex Stroup

    Gloucester's Cosmos Gallery

    By: Cosmos - May 08th, 2026

    COSMOS Gallery presents Drawn to Paint, an exhibition which explores the role of drawing, both informal and preparatory, in the creative process of painters Jeffrey Marshall and Alex Stroup. Through the installation of paintings paired with their drawn origins, this exhibition creates a dialogue between two approaches to imagery that exist independently and interdependently.

  • Assassins Review Ends Sarasota Players Season

    Stephen Sondheim-John Weidman Musical Remains Potent and Topical

    By: Jay Handelman - May 05th, 2026

    Opening just days after a California man was charged with attempting to assassinate President Donald Trump, the Sarasota Players’s captivating production of the Stephen Sondheim-John Weidman musical “Assassins” could not be more topical, no matter how coincidental the timing.

  • Avital Sagalyn: Mid-Century Provincetown

    Provincetown Art Association and Museum

    By: PAAM - May 01st, 2026

    Avital Sagalyn: Mid-Century Provincetown showcases more than three dozen works by perhaps one of the 20th century’s most adept and exciting artists, who spent the summers of 1945 and 1946 as a young painter living at the northernmost tip of Cape Cod.

  • An Exquisite Eye at Clark Art Institute

    Aso O. Tavitian Collection

    By: Clark - May 01st, 2026

    The exhibition brings together a vibrant range of paintings, sculpture, drawings, and decorative arts from more than four centuries of artistic production (c. 1450-1850). An Exquisite Eye includes rare early Netherlandish painting, Italian Renaissance sculpture, Baroque portraiture, and eighteenth-century French works by artists such as Jan van Eyck, Jean-Antoine Houdon, and Elizabeth Louise Vigée-Lebrun.

  • Edith Wharton Summit

    At the Mount

    By: Mount - Apr 30th, 2026

    The Mount, Edith Wharton Cultural Center, will host the 2026 Edith Wharton Summit from Thursday, June 4 through Saturday, June 6, 2026, bringing together leading scholars, cultural historians, writers, and Wharton enthusiasts from around the world for three days of inquiry, dialogue, and immersive programming.

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