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Fine Arts

  • Letter from Brooklyn

    Ruckus Manhattan at the Brooklyn Museum

    By: Patricia Hills - Oct 08th, 2025

    Ruckus Manhattan was constructed at a time, 1975-78, when New York City was going to hell.  The city was bankrupt, crime exploded, homeless people were sleeping in subway corridors, and there was a failure of leadership in City Hall.

  • Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

    Current and Upcoming Exhibitions

    By: Guggenheim - Oct 09th, 2025

    The Guggenheim New York announces its 2026 exhibition calendar, a milestone year featuring major shows that celebrate the creativity and global reach of American modern and contemporary art.  Solo Rotunda exhibitions by artists Carol Bove and Taryn Simon, along with a survey of Pop art, will spotlight the innovations and impact of American art.

  • Boston Public Art Triennial

    Overcoming Civic Neglect

    By: Mark Favermann - Oct 16th, 2025

    Through the efforts of the Boston Public Art Triennial, the City of Boston’s civic life and built environment have been enhanced and strengthened. Bravo!

  • Ecologies of the In\between

    Gallery 51 in North Adams

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 16th, 2025

    Distancing itself from apocalyptic rhetoric, the in\between reminds us that ends and beginnings coexist, ecologically. The exhibition brings together four artists — Johanna Hedva, CAConrad, Kelsey Shultis, and Bayo Akomolafe — whose work collectively moves across and between forms — drawing, painting, sculpture, poetry, sound — in an embrace of pluralities, thresholds, and portals.

  • Dawn Nelson All in the Same Boat Now

    At Future Labs in North Adams

    By: Future - Oct 22nd, 2025

    This exhibition contains stories on video and artwork inspired by ancestors created and told by myself, and my family, friends, and neighbors. We all come with our personal stories. I began exploring my own story in my artwork through a 2024 project entitled The Little Red House.

  • Time at the Aurora Archive(s)

    Lively Mix at Former Great Barrington Train Station

    By: Noah Kane-Smalls - Oct 24th, 2025

    The Great Barrington Station House has never felt this alive. Aurora Archive(s) presents “Time” as a curated experience merging art, design, and fashion into one immersive environment. Beyond the sharp mix of global fashion, avant-garde art, and niche jewelry, the transformation of the station itself adds another layer of brilliance to unpack. It's culture on culture.

  • Brattleboro Museum & Art Center

    Four New Exhibitions

    By: Brattleboro - Oct 24th, 2025

    Four new exhibits open at the Brattleboro Museum & Art Center on Saturday, Nov. 15. The new exhibits include a tribute to the late art historian Meyer Schapiro and solo shows featuring Erika Ranee, Elliott Katz, and Ray Materson.“Singing in Unison, Part 13: Homage to Meyer Schapiro” was conceived by Phong H. Bui, Co-Founder and Artistic Director of The Brooklyn Rail, a prolific curator and leading figure in contemporary American art and culture. 

  • Acquisition and Cultural Stewardship

    Non-Weestern Art Objects in American Art Museums 

    By: Noah Kane-Smalls - Oct 28th, 2025

    Resulting from Colonialism and looting some 90% of traditional African art is not to be found in Africa. Only recently has there been an awareness of this inequity. Noah Kane-Smalls is an administrator at Williams College Art Museum with some 20 years in the field. Here with passion and precision he lays out the issues and what needs to be done.

  • Gabrielle Munter at Guggenheim Museum

    First Major Exhibition in Thirty Years

    By: Guggenheim - Oct 29th, 2025

    Gabriele Münter: Contours of a World will focus on her heightened Expressionist production from around 1908 to 1920, while also highlighting her later developments. The presentation will comprise some sixty paintings and nineteen of her early photographs across three galleries.

  • MFA Returns Pots to Family of Enslaved Potter

    David Drake Recognized as an American Master

    By: MFA - Oct 29th, 2025

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), has reached a historic agreement with the known descendants of David?Drake (also known as Dave the Potter) regarding two monumental stoneware vessels in the MFA’s collection that were made by the enslaved potter and poet. The Museum has restored ownership of both works, returning one to Drake’s family and purchasing the other back.

  • Mario Diacono 1930-2025

    Legendary Italian Born Boston Gallerist

    By: Charles Giuliano - Oct 30th, 2025

    In every sense Marion Diacono, who died today, was truly unique and remarkable. As a gallerist he had a deep and lasting impact but few of the A list works he showed remained in Boston. Italian born with a global vision his program was light years out of reach for earth bound and generally reactionary collectors, curators and critics. While they came to look mostly collectors failed to open their wallets. There were token sales to the MFA and at that time the ICA did not collect.

  • Theodore E. Stebbins, Jr. Publishes a Critical Study of American Art

    Rethinking American Art: Collectors, Critics, and the Changing Canon

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 02nd, 2025

    Nobody but Theodore E. Stebbins, Jr. could have written such a remarkable book. Drawing on a lifetime as a curator and scholar he has provided a sweeping critical analysis of the field of American Art from Colonial times through the present. With complete authority he rampages through an intriguingly well written and argued book that pulls no punches in telling it like it is.

  • The Clark Art Institute Appoints Lara Yeager-Crasselt

    Aso O. Tavitian Curator of Early Modern European Painting and Sculpture.

    By: Clark - Nov 05th, 2025

    The Clark Art Institute announces that Lara Yeager-Crasselt has been appointed to serve as the first Aso O. Tavitian Curator of Early Modern European Painting and Sculpture.

  • 2025 Boston Artadia Awards

    Awardees: Sónia Almeida, Brittni Ann Harvey, and Sopheak Sam. 

    By: Artadia - Nov 06th, 2025

    Artadia, a non-profit grantmaking organization and nationwide community of visual artists, curators, and patrons,  announces the 2025 Boston Artadia Awardees: Sónia Almeida, the Wagner Foundation Boston Artadia Award recipient; Brittni Ann Harvey; and Sopheak Sam. 

  • Avery, Gottlieb & Rothko: By the Sea

    Blockbuster Reopens Cape Ann Museum in June

    By: CAM - Nov 16th, 2025

    Building on the extraordinary momentum and record attendance generated by the 2023 exhibition Edward Hopper & Cape Ann: Illuminating an American Landscape, the Cape Ann Museum is pleased to announce a new landmark exhibition, Avery, Gottlieb & Rothko: By the Sea, on view from June 30 through September 27, 2026. 

  • Cape Ann Museum Taken for Granite

    Hammers on Stone: The Granite Industry & Cape Ann

    By: Charles Giuliano - Nov 16th, 2025

    There is a judicious balance between tools and ephemera of the industry as well as a superb and insightful mix of works from the museum’s collection that further enhance and illustrate this history. Most intriguing was the manner in which granite and the quarries inspired artists.  

  • The New England Experimental Art Group

    Gloucester"s Cosmos Gallery

    By: Cosmos - Nov 17th, 2025

    COSMOS Gallery’s  Unexpected #25 – Unwrapped will feature numerous and diverse artwork by The New England Experimental Art Group. The group is renowned for their innovative pursuit of contemporary art, with no constraints on technique or materials.

  • Shadow Visionaries: French Artists Against the Current, 1840–70 

    At the Clark Art Institute

    By: Clark - Nov 17th, 2025

    The Clark Art Institute presents an exhibition on mid-nineteenth-century French artists who looked beyond realistic subject matter. Their work encompasses the Gothic nostalgia of architectural photography, the social critique embedded in searing allegorical illustrations, and the literary connections with fantastical art. Shadow Visionaries: French Artists Against the Current, 1840–70 i

  • Peabody Essex Museum

    19th Century Sculptor Edmonia Lewis

    By: PEM - Nov 24th, 2025

    The Peabody Essex Museum (PEM) presents the first major retrospective exhibition of the work of acclaimed 19th-century Black and Indigenous sculptor Edmonia Lewis. 30 sculptures by Lewis from public and private collections across the United States and abroad will be brought together with a number of additional objects in a range of media, giving visitors an opportunity to learn of Lewis’ mastery of marble and her remarkable, storied life.

  • Susan Cross of MASS MoCA

    Appointed Director of Curatorial Affairs

    By: MOCA - Dec 01st, 2025

    Susan Cross has been appointed to the new position of Director of Curatorial Affairs at MASS MoCA following a nationwide search.   

  • Jared Abner Hauntology

    Boston's HallSpace

    By: Hall - Dec 03rd, 2025

    HallSpace presents Hauntology an exhibition of wood sculpture by Jared Abner. This is Abner’s first solo exhibition at HallSpace. In 2021, he was in a 2-person show.

  • Patricia Hills: Art World Feminist

    A Lively and Insightful Memoir

    By: Charles Giuliano - Dec 06th, 2025

    Now in her late 80s. Patricia Hills overcame numerous obstacles to become one of the leading scholars and curators of American art. I knew her as a radical leftist feminist at Boston University. This intriguing and insightful memoir chronicles that daunting journey. The book conflates her life as wife and mother with struggles in academia which regarded the study of American art as "too easy." As a force majeure she trained a generation of Americanist scholars and curators.

  • Clark Art Institute

    Announces 2026 Season

    By: Clark - Dec 09th, 2025

    The Clark Art Institute announces its exhibition schedule through 2026. The lineup includes the first public presentation of the Aso O. Tavitian Collection with an exhibition featuring selected highlights from the 331 works of art that were given to the Clark in 2024.

  • Ginny Williams, Art Whisperer

    A Moving Film

    By: Susan Hall - Dec 10th, 2025

    Director Flemming Fynsk's moving film The Art Whisperer is in contention for awards this year. Its subject, Ginny Williams, was an art collector and gallery owner of remarkable instinct and vision.

  • Decentering Whiteness

    A Museum Makeover

    By: Noah Kane-Smalls - Dec 12th, 2025

    A recovering art critic once asked after reading the 1619 Project, “Why don’t you hate all white people?” I asked, “What is a white person anyway?” We realized our identities are far more complex than the containers imposed on us. Whiteness is a burden, built on supremacy, nationalism, colonialism, slavery, and global violence.

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