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Fine Arts

  • Adriana G. Prat: Topographical Visions

    Hall Space

    By: Hall Space - Feb 10th, 2023

    HallSpace presents paintings by Adriana G. Prat, an academically-trained scientist with a Ph.D. in Biophysics. Adriana’s curiosity for the natural world stemmed in her country of birth, Argentina. In Topographical Visions, Prat shares her awareness of the environmental crisis.

  • Erica H. Adams and Marjorie Minkin Go Fed

    Concurrent Solo Exhibits in Boston's Moakley Courthouse

    By: Erica H. Adams - Feb 13th, 2023

    Concurrent solo exhibits at Boston's Moakley Courthouse, present new abstract watercolors by Erica H. Adams and abstract Lexan wall reliefs by Marjorie Minkin that share transparency, color-light and layers that reveal content.    

  • Future Lab(s) Gallery in North Adams

    Anna Vojtech and Maria Denjongpa  

    By: Future Labs - Feb 15th, 2023

    Future Lab(s) is an artist run, community based gallery that welcomes the public to the historic, cultural district in North Adams, MA. We are a visual arts gallery and installation space dedicated to providing support and exhibition space to (primarily) northern Berkshires artists at every stage of their artistic development. 

  • London's V&A Acquires David Bowie Archive

    Encompassing More Than 80,000 Items

    By: V&A - Feb 23rd, 2023

    Spanning Bowie's career, the archive features handwritten lyrics, letters, sheet music, original costumes, fashion, photography, film, music videos, set designs, Bowie's own instruments, album artwork, and awards. It also includes more intimate writings, thought processes, and unrealised projects, the majority of which have never been seen in public before.

  • Louis Risoli and Peter Vanderwaker

    At Gallery NAGA

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 04th, 2023

    Following the work over a number of decades, Louis Risoli has been among Boston’s foremost artists. He is long overdue for a museum restrospective. His work is on view in March at Boston's Gallery Naga which has represented him for many years.

  • Whitney Museum Workers

    Negotiate First Union Contract

    By: Union - Mar 06th, 2023

    After more than a year of bargaining, the Whitney Museum Union of Local 2110 UAW have reached a tentative agreement with the Museum on a first union contract. Union members are in the process of voting on the contract.

  • Guggenheim Museum Acquisitons

    Emphasis on Diversity

    By: Guggenheim - Mar 08th, 2023

    In 2022 the Guggenheim acquired over 60 works by more than 40 artists, of whom 75% are new to its collection. The works span from the 1960s to the present day and augment the museum’s holdings of some of the world’s most influential artists.

  • Stephanie Boyd and Jane Hudson

    Double Header at Spring Street in Williamstown

    By: Charles Giuliano - Mar 12th, 2023

    Welcome spring with a double header exhibition by Stephanie Boyd and Jane Hudson at Spring Street Market and Cafe in Williamstown. It will be on view from April 1 through June 17.

  • Creative Alloys: The Boston Metal Scene

    Fuller Craft Museum

    By: Mark Favermann - Mar 16th, 2023

    Like Sutton Hoo, King Tut’s Tomb, and Scythian Gold, the most exhilarating archeological finds are often the discoveries of beautifully crafted metal objects. A gorgeous shiny object suggests riches of untold value, something precious with which to feather our nests. Viewing the Fuller Craft Museum’s compelling show Creative Alloys is a bit like peeking at an elegantly revealed excavation filled with treasures.

  • Clark Art Institute Announces Acquisitions

    Two by Marguerite Gérard and One by Evelyn De Morgan

    By: Clark - Mar 29th, 2023

    The Clark Art Institute recently added three new paintings to its permanent collection, enhancing its holdings of works by women artists. The paintings, two by Marguerite Gérard and one by Evelyn De Morgan, are the first by either artist to enter the Clark’s collection.

  • ICA Foster Prize Winners

    Cicely Carew, Venetia Dale, and Yu-Wen Wu

    By: ICA - Mar 29th, 2023

    Cicely Carew, Venetia Dale, and Yu-Wen Wu have been named the recipients of the 2023 James and Audrey Foster Prize Exhibition. Their exhibition at the ICA, on view August 24–January 2, will encompass a wide range of media—from sculpture and installation to time-based media and works on paper.

  • Rafael Mahdavi: Letter from Paris

    Cadavre exquis II: Seascape, dog, geranium, calla lily, vase

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 01st, 2023

    Rafael Mahdavi, is a global artist who lives and works in France and Greece. Some years ago he commuted from Wellesley to Paris. At that time I curated an exhibition simultaneously for New England School of Art/ Suffolk University and Boston's French Library. We have been in touch ever since. This is an update on the latest work.

  • Riopelle Dialogues Projects

    Canadian Artists from Sea to Sea

    By: Riopelle - Apr 03rd, 2023

    The Jean Paul Riopelle Foundation, in collaboration with the Department of Canadian Heritage and Culture pour tous, is proud to announce the Canadian artists who have been selected to realize 9 cultural mediation projects as part of the Riopelle Dialogues Program, one of the most ambitious cultural mediation programs ever seen in Canada.

  • MASS MoCA Summer 2023

    Exhibitions and Programming

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 05th, 2023

    MASS MoCA announces Summer 2023 programming including the exhibitions Joseph Grigely: In What Way Wham? (White Noise and Other Works, 1996-2023), on view beginning May 28, Anne Samat: Love, on view beginning June 24, and Elle Pérez: Intimacies, on view beginning July 22

  • The Velvet Underground & Nico: Scepter Studio Sessions

    Pittsburgh's Warhol Museum

    By: Warhol - Apr 06th, 2023

    The Velvet Underground & Nico: Scepter Studio Sessions highlights the Velvet Underground and the music from their first recording sessions in April 1966 at Scepter Studios in New York City. The exhibition centers on the original tapes of the nine initial tracks recorded by the band, recently identified while processing Andy Warhol’s archive at The Warhol, which became the bedrock of their debut album The Velvet Underground & Nico (1967, Verve Records), one of the most jarring and influential albums in rock music.

  • Suzette Martin at UMASS

    Apocalypse: Science and Myth

    By: Suzette Martin - Apr 10th, 2023

    Announcing the opening of my artist-in-residence exhibition at the Kinney Center for Interdisciplinary Renaissance Studies at UMass, Amherst.

  • Edward and Jo Hopper at Cape Ann Museum

    Part of Glucester 400th Plus

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 10th, 2023

    In 1923 Edward Hopper spent his second summer in Gloucester. He met and later married the artist Josephine Nivison. That summer he painted several pictures and created a number of water colors. They worked side by side. A century later, on the occasion of Gloucester 400 Plus their work will be on view at the Cape Ann Museum.

  • Portland Museum of Art Reinstalls Collection

    Passages in American Art

    By: PMA - Apr 11th, 2023

    Passages in American Art is a fundamental reinterpretation of the collection, platforming multiple voices, revealing new ways of looking at some of the museum’s most beloved works of art, and inviting community members to drive the conversation. Opening May 27, 2023, the project examines the existing collection, and along with recent acquisitions, commissions, and select long-term loans, integrates Atlantic narratives and Indigenous perspectives to expand the story of American art. 

  • The Barnes Foundation Looks at South Africa

    Sue Williamson and Lebohang Kganye Encourgae Remembrance

    By: Susan Hall - Apr 11th, 2023

    In their respective practices, Sue Williamson (b. 1941) and Lebohang Kganye (b. 1990) incorporate oral histories into films, photographs, installations, and textiles to consider how the stories our elders tell us shape family narratives and personal identities. Implicitly and explicitly addressing legacies of racial violence and social injustice, their work offers a cross-generational dialogue on history, memory, and the power of self-narration.

  • Former Met Director Philippe de Montebello Picketed

    Striking Staff of the Hispanic Society of America

    By: Hispanic - Apr 19th, 2023

    De Montebello, who was formerly Executive Director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, has repeatedly refused to address staff concerns about health and safety for both staff and the collection itself.  

  • Jaune Quick-to-See Smith: Memory Map

    First Retrospective by Native Artist at Whitney Museum

    By: Charles Giuliano - Apr 29th, 2023

    Now 82, at long last the Native American artist, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, is the subject of a retrospective at a major New York Museum. Jaune Quick-to-See Smith: Memory Map will be on view at the Whitney Museum of American Art from April 19 to August 13, 202

  • William Flynn: 50 Years 50 Drawings

    Boston's HallSpace

    By: HallSpace - May 11th, 2023

    Flynn has made hundreds, perhaps thousands of drawings over the last 50 years. Choosing just 50 (really 61) drawings is nearly an impossible task. William Flynn is an artist that spends days drawing. He finds ways to express the beauty in mundane objects; an old baseball mitt, ski boots, a bicycle that was run over and flattened, cars at junkyards, an old arm chair, pop-up books, whirly-gigs.

  • Young Picasso in Paris

    Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

    By: Guggenheim - May 12th, 2023

    Coinciding with the fiftieth anniversary of Picasso’s death, Young Picasso in Paris highlights a significant work, Le Moulin de la Galette (ca. November 1900), from the Guggenheim collection. The famous dance hall—formerly a mill engaged in the production of a brown bread, or galette—had also been depicted by such avant-gardists as Ramón Casas, Pierre-Auguste Renoir, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and Vincent van Gogh.

  • Art Bath's De Gustation

    Making Multi Media Art for the Masses

    By: Susan Hall - May 15th, 2023

    Elizabeth Yilmaz and Mara Driscoll, two dancers from the Metropolitan Opera troupe, have created a performance series that’s as wonderful as it is unique.  The final performance of the spring season, and the 9th produced by this team with associate Cesar Abreu, was in the spirit of a happening.

  • Blockbuster Planned for Cape Ann Museum

    Edward Hopper & Cape Ann: Illuminating an American Landscape

    By: CAM - May 16th, 2023

    Edward Hopper (1882-1967) visited Cape Ann initially at the invitation of his friend and fellow painter, Leon Kroll (1884-1974), and produced his first oil painting outdoors in the United States during that trip. The Whitney Museum is lending Hopper’s five oils painted in Gloucester in 1912, including Briar (sic) Neck, Gloucester (1912); Tall Masts (1912); Italian Quarter (1912); and Gloucester Harbor (1912). The exhibition will mark the first time these works have ever been shown together on Cape Ann.

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