city_hall

Official websites use .boston.gov

A .boston.gov website belongs to an official government organization in the City of Boston.

lock

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS

A lock or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Last updated:

Roxbury Branch Public Art: Artist talk and poetry reading

Learn about one of the public art projects coming to the new Roxbury Branch of the Boston Public Library.

November 5, 2020
  • 5:30pm - 6:30pm
  • Happening online
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Roxbury
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-11-05T17:30:00 - 2020-11-05T18:30:00

The Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture invites you to a virtual artist talk and poetry reading for the Roxbury Branch Library Clerestory Project on Thursday, November, 5th, 2020, from 5:30 PM- 6:30 PM.

The Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture is hosting this virtual talk to share information about the project, which is the first of two public art projects that will complement the renovation of the Roxbury Branch of the Boston Public Library. There will be a short presentation and poetry reading, followed by a question and answer session.

To participate in the event, join the Zoom meeting. If you are unable to connect to audio or you do not have internet, you can call into the meeting by dialing +1-646-558-8656 US and entering Meeting Meeting ID: 867 3810 0889#. This event will also be live-streamed on the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture Facebook page.

About the participants

Nakia Hill was named a Boston Artist-in-Residence in 2018 by Mayor Walsh. She is a writer, journalist, and educator who focuses on empowering women to use writing as a tool for healing and resistance. Hill is the author of two books: "Water Carrier" and "I Still Did It". Learn more about Nakia or purchase her books on her website.

Asiyah is a poet, activist, and 826 Boston’s Youth Literary Advisory Board’s Teaching Artist. She was a finalist for the City of Boston’s Youth Poet Laureate residency.

Joe Wardwell is currently an Associate Professor of Painting at Brandeis University (Waltham, MA) where he founded the Brandeis-in-Siena program in 2015. He received a Bachelor of Arts in Art History, and a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting in 1996 from the University of Washington (Seattle, WA). In 1999, he received a Master of Fine Arts in Painting from Boston University (Boston, MA).  Currently on view through 2022, Wardwell has a large scale wall drawing commissioned for the renovation of building 6 at MASS MoCA in North Adams, MA. His work has been exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum (Lincoln, MA) and Wardwell's work is in each collection. In 2012, Wardwell was a recipient of the Massachusetts Cultural Council Grant for Painting and was recently awarded the Distinguished Alumni Award from the School of Creative Arts at Boston University. In addition to numerous group exhibitions throughout the region, he has held solo exhibitions in New York, New Haven, Boston, and Seattle. In 2020, Wardwell will exhibit in New York with the Frosch and Portmann gallery in the Lower East Side. His work is represented in Boston by the LaMontagne Gallery (Boston, MA). Wardwell lives with his family in Jamaica Plain and his studio is in Dorchester.

November 5, 2020
  • 5:30pm - 6:30pm
  • Happening online
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Roxbury
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-11-05T17:30:00 - 2020-11-05T18:30:00
Last updated:

HOME: Poetry reading and open mic series

This project is made possible in part by the Academy of American Poets, with funds from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. 

February 5, 2021
  • 7:30pm - 9:30pm
    Repeats monthly on Friday, but only the first instance of this set, starting from February 5, 2021, until June 4, 2021
  • Happening Virtually
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Citywide
    Roxbury
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
  • Workshop Series

    Workshops will be held every first Saturday of the month from November 2020 to June 2021.

    Workshop information

2021-02-05T19:30:00 - 2021-02-05T21:30:00

HOME is a poetry reading, open mic, and workshop series led by Boston Poet Laureate Porsha Olayiwola. It consists of a featured reader and brief open mic every first Friday of the month, followed by a writing workshop the following Saturday morning. Anthony Febo will host the readings and open mics, and the dates are listed below.

The theme, HOME, is born out of our current space, time, crisis, and future-shaping. What does home mean? What isn’t home? Who is lacking home? Now that we are all home so much, how do we like our homes? Ourselves? Our families? What is home, in the literal and figurative sense? Is the body a type of home? How so? Is a poem a type of home? How do we integrate this into content and craft?

HOME is curated by our current Poet Laureate, Porsha Olayiwola.  A Boston transplant and Roxbury resident, Olayiwola seeks to create a shared digital space for Bostonians to write and share at the intersection of poetry and storytelling. 

Readings and open mics will be held on the first Friday of the month at 7:30 p.m.

Register for a reading and open mic 

February 5, 2021
  • 7:30pm - 9:30pm
    Repeats monthly on Friday, but only the first instance of this set, starting from February 5, 2021, until June 4, 2021
  • Happening Virtually
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Citywide
    Roxbury
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
  • Workshop Series

    Workshops will be held every first Saturday of the month from November 2020 to June 2021.

    Workshop information

2021-02-05T19:30:00 - 2021-02-05T21:30:00

Upcoming readings and open mics

May 7, 2021, at 7:30 p.m. Martin Espada
June 4, 2021, at 7:30 p.m. Rajiv Mohabir
Last updated:

HOME: Poetry workshop series

This project is made possible in part by the Academy of American Poets, with funds from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. 

February 6, 2021
  • 11:30am - 1:00pm
    Repeats monthly on Saturday, but only the first instance of this set, starting from February 6, 2021, until June 5, 2021
  • Happening Virtually
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Citywide
    Roxbury
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
  • Poetry Reading and Open Mic Series

    The poetry readings and open mics will be held on the first Friday of every month through June 2021:

    Open mic information

2021-02-06T11:30:00 - 2021-02-06T13:00:00

HOME is a poetry reading, open mic, and workshop series led by Boston Poet Laureate Porsha Olayiwola. It consists of a featured reader and brief open mic every first Friday of the month, followed by a writing workshop the following Saturday morning. Workshop topics are listed below.

The theme, HOME, is born out of our current space, time, crisis, and future-shaping. What does home mean? What isn’t home? Who is lacking home? Now that we are all home so much, how do we like our homes? Ourselves? Our families? What is home, in the literal and figurative sense? Is the body a type of home? How so? Is a poem a type of home? How do we integrate this into content and craft?

HOME is curated by our current Poet Laureate, Porsha Olayiwola.  A Boston transplant and Roxbury resident, Olayiwola seeks to create a shared digital space for Bostonians to write and share at the intersection of poetry and storytelling. 

Workshops will be held on the first Saturday of the month, from 11:30 a.m. - 1 p.m.

Register for a workshop

February 6, 2021
  • 11:30am - 1:00pm
    Repeats monthly on Saturday, but only the first instance of this set, starting from February 6, 2021, until June 5, 2021
  • Happening Virtually
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Citywide
    Roxbury
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
  • Poetry Reading and Open Mic Series

    The poetry readings and open mics will be held on the first Friday of every month through June 2021:

    Open mic information

2021-02-06T11:30:00 - 2021-02-06T13:00:00

Upcoming workshops

Upcoming workshops
About the Facilitator

Martín Espada was born in Brooklyn, New York. He has published more than 20 books as a poet, editor, essayist, and translator. His forthcoming book of poems from Norton is called, "Floaters". Other books of poems include, "Vivas to Those Who Have Failed" (2016), "The Trouble Ball" (2011), "The Republic of Poetry" (2006), "Alabanza" (2003), "A Mayan Astronomer in Hell’s Kitchen" (2000), "Imagine the Angels of Bread" (1996), and "City of Coughing and Dead Radiators" (1993). He is the editor of "What Saves Us: Poems of Empathy and Outrage in the Age of Trump" (2019). He has received the Ruth Lilly Poetry Prize, the Shelley Memorial Award, the Robert Creeley Award, the National Hispanic Cultural Center Literary Award, an American Book Award, an Academy of American Poets Fellowship, the PEN/Revson Fellowship and a Guggenheim Fellowship. The Republic of Poetry was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. His book of essays and poems, "Zapata’s Disciple" (1998), was banned in Tucson as part of the Mexican-American Studies Program outlawed by the state of Arizona, and reissued by Northwestern. A former tenant lawyer, Espada is a professor of English at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst.

The theme for April is "My Last Name". This is a generative workshop. Through the example of a great Afro-Cuban poet and the voices of the poets in workshop, we will explore ancestors, family, culture, history, memory, the known and unknown, the spoken and unspoken, elements that make up what we call “identity.” Poets will write on the spot, wherever they may be, then read their poems aloud — not for critical feedback, but for thunderous applause.

Headshot of Martin Espada, photo courtesy of David González
Headshot of Martin Espada (Photo courtesy of David González)
About the Facilitator

Rajiv Mohabir is the author of "The Cowherd’s Son" (Tupelo Press 2017, winner of the 2015 Kundiman Prize; Eric Hoffer Honorable Mention 2018) and "The Taxidermist’s Cut" (Four Way Books 2016, winner of the Four Way Books Intro to Poetry Prize, Finalist for the Lambda Literary Award for Gay Poetry in 2017), and translator of "I Even Regret Night: Holi Songs of Demerara" (1916) (Kaya Press 2019, winner of the 2020 Harold Morton Landon Translation Award from the Academy of American Poets), which received a PEN/Heim Translation Fund Grant Award. His memoir, "ANTIMAN", won the 2019 Reckless Books’ New Immigrant Writing Prize and is forthcoming 2021. Currently he is an Assistant Professor of poetry in the MFA program at Emerson College, and translations editor at Waxwing Journal.

A description of the workshop will be posted here soon.

Rajiv Mohabir headshot
Headshot of Rajiv Mohabir
Last updated:

Trans and non-binary town hall

The event will discuss the representation of transgender and nonbinary individuals in the City of Boston’s policies and processes.

October 7, 2020
  • 4:00pm - 6:00pm
  • Virtual Event
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Boston AIR
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Citywide
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-10-07T16:00:00 - 2020-10-07T18:00:00

City of Boston Artist-In-Residence Golden and Feminine Empowerment Movement Slam (FEMS) Founding Director Zenaida Peterson will co-host a virtual Town Hall on October 7 from 4 - 6 p.m., in partnership with the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture. The event will discuss the representation of transgender and nonbinary individuals in the City of Boston’s policies and processes, with a focus on naming ways the City can better support transgender and nonbinary Bostonians.

This town hall will collect written and oral testimony specifically from trans, nonbinary, genderqueer, and gender-expansive individuals currently living in the Greater Boston area.

Submit testimony

Through the Boston Artists-in-Residence (AIR) program, artists work with a parallel cohort of City partners to explore, critique, and re-imagine City initiatives at the intersection of civil service, social justice, and artistic practice.

About Golden

Golden (they/them) is a black gender-nonconforming trans-femme photographer and poet raised in Hampton, VA, currently residing in Boston, MA. Golden is the recipient of a Pink Door Fellowship (2017/2019), an Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum Luminaries Fellowship (2019), the Frontier Award for New Poets (2019), and a Pushcart Nomination (wildness, 2019). Their work has been featured on/at the Shade Journal, the Offing, wildness, Button Poetry, Buzzfeed, i-D, Interview Magazine, & elsewhere. Golden holds a BFA in Photography from New York University and is currently a City of Boston Artist-in-Residence. Instagram | Twitter | Golden's website

About Zenaida Peterson

Zenaida Peterson, author of “Breakfast for Dinner and Other Blasphemous Things” published by Pizza Pi Press is a mystic, an organizer, a house plant gardener and a Black non-binary poet from the south currently thriving in Boston, Massachusetts. They are the founding director of Feminine Empowerment Movement Slam (FEMS), an all ages radical poetry slam centering marginalized people and celebrating the feminine. Zenaida are easing the impacts of 2020 by learning to make plant medicine, engaging in restorative justice, mutual aid and farming. They are the Equity and Empowerment Director of Quaker Voluntary Service. Their current project is spending each month of 2020 conquering a different fear of theirs.

October 7, 2020
  • 4:00pm - 6:00pm
  • Virtual Event
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Boston AIR
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Citywide
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-10-07T16:00:00 - 2020-10-07T18:00:00
Last updated:

Question and answer session: Adams Street branch library call to artists

The Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture is hosting a question and answer session for artists and artist teams interested in the Call to Artists for public art at the Adams Street branch library.

September 9, 2020
  • 6:00pm - 7:00pm
  • Online
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-09-09T18:00:00 - 2020-09-09T19:00:00

The session will be held virtually on September 9, 2020, at 6 p.m. ET. Interested artists can participate by visiting our Zoom meeting. You can submit a question in advance through our online form.

The deadline to apply for the public art project is September 16, 2020, at 5 p.m. ET.

September 9, 2020
  • 6:00pm - 7:00pm
  • Online
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-09-09T18:00:00 - 2020-09-09T19:00:00
Last updated:

Question and Answer session: Roxbury Branch Library Call to Artists

The Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture is hosting a question and answer session for artists and artist teams interested in the Call to Artists for public art at the Roxbury Branch Library.

September 2, 2020
  • 6:00pm - 7:00pm
  • 1 City Hall Square
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Sarah Rodrigo
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-09-02T18:00:00 - 2020-09-02T19:00:00

The session will be held virtually on September 2, 2020, at 6 p.m. ET. Questions can be submitted in advance using our online form.

This is the second of two public art projects that will complement the renovation of the Roxbury Branch of the Boston Public Library. The deadline to apply for the project is September 9, 2020, at 5 p.m. ET. Learn more about the project.

Interested artists can join the meeting using this link, or by dialing 646-558-8656 and entering Meeting ID 853 0361 6603#.

September 2, 2020
  • 6:00pm - 7:00pm
  • 1 City Hall Square
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Sarah Rodrigo
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-09-02T18:00:00 - 2020-09-02T19:00:00
Last updated:

Confronting Colonial Myths in Boston's Public Space

This event is facilitated by Erin Genia, Sisseton-Wahpeton Dakota, an Artist-in-Residence in the City of Boston.

July 21, 2020
  • 6:00pm - 7:00pm
    Repeats weekly on Tuesday, starting from July 21, 2020, 3 times
  • Online
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-07-21T18:00:00 - 2020-08-04T19:00:00

During this virtual panel series, Indigenous leaders and artists will speak about their work in the public realm, and address how symbols perpetuating colonial myths affect the lives of Indigenous people in the City and contribute to the public health emergency of racism.



The first event in this series will be held on Tuesday, July 21, at 6 p.m. The second event will be on Tuesday, July 28, at 6 p.m., and the third event will take place on August 4, at 6 p.m. The events will be livestreamed to the Mayor's Office of Arts & Culture Boston Facebook page.



The speakers for the first event include:

  • Mahtowin Munro, Lakota, Co-leader of United American Indians of New England and lead organizer for IndigenousPeoplesDayMA.org, will speak about the “Dismantle Now! BIPOC Solidarity Against White Supremacy: March + Art Action” that took place at Faneuil Hall Square on July 8, as well as her work calling for the removal of the Columbus statue and other colonial monuments and symbols in Boston.
  • Lilly E. Manycolors, mixed Choctaw, interdisciplinary artist and scholar, will discuss her work “MISKODOODISWAN Red Sweat Lodge: Witnessing/Healing of Missing and Murdered Women,” now installed on Boston Common. 
  • Jean-Luc Pierite, Tunica-Biloxi Tribe of Louisiana, President of the Board, North American Indian Center of Boston, will talk about his work advocating for the protection of sacred sites around Boston. 

The speakers for the second event will be announced soon.

July 21, 2020
  • 6:00pm - 7:00pm
    Repeats weekly on Tuesday, starting from July 21, 2020, 3 times
  • Online
    Boston,
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-07-21T18:00:00 - 2020-08-04T19:00:00
Last updated:

Northern Avenue Bridge Public Meeting

Join us for a virtual meeting to talk about public art for the Northern Avenue Bridge project.

July 16, 2020
  • 7:00pm - 8:00pm
  • Online via Zoom
    Boston, 02201
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-07-16T19:00:00 - 2020-07-16T20:00:00

The Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture is hosting a public meeting on July 16 to share information about the City’s public art commissioning process and hear your thoughts about permanent public art for the new Northern Avenue Bridge. There will be a short presentation followed by a question and answer session. 

For the safety of the project team and meeting attendees, this meeting will be hosted online, using Zoom. The meeting will be recorded and posted online for those who cannot attend. Join the Zoom meeting link or dial 301-715-8592 and enter Meeting I.D. 817 8531 6085 #.

Additionally, the presentation will be posted on the Arts and Culture website in advance of the meeting to give people who can only attend by phone an opportunity to review the presentation.  

The Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture will accept comments before and after the meeting at bac@boston.com. Please include “Northern Avenue Bridge” in the subject line. Comment period ends on July 30, 2020. 

July 16, 2020
  • 7:00pm - 8:00pm
  • Online via Zoom
    Boston, 02201
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-07-16T19:00:00 - 2020-07-16T20:00:00
Last updated:

Mark Juneteenth with 'Poetry as Protest'

The Partnership to Renew the Shaw 54th Regiment Memorial (the Museum of African American History, Friends of the Public Garden, the National Park Service, the Friends of the Public Garden, and the City of Boston) is excited to join the Royall House and Slave Quarters in presenting a special Juneteenth program.

June 19, 2020
2020-06-19T19:00:00 - 2020-06-19T21:00:00

Malcolm Tariq

Juneteenth 2020 coincides with a pandemic within a pandemic: the challenge of COVID-19 and America’s reckoning with its history of racism. Black Lives Matter.

Beyond the renewal of an iconic monument, we partners seek to educate, inform, and convene community conversations and special programs exploring history, race, and social justice. We hope these dialogues will lead to greater understanding — and ultimately social change which is long overdue. 

Register for the event

Visit the website for more information about the Restoration of the Shaw 54th Regiment Memorial on Boston Common.

June 19, 2020
2020-06-19T19:00:00 - 2020-06-19T21:00:00
Last updated:

Ruggles Corridor integrated public art site walk and talk

We're holding a site walk-through and question and answer session for our Ruggles Corridor integrated Public Art Project.

March 6, 2020
  • 3:00pm - 4:30pm
  • The Dewitt Center
    122 Dewitt Drive
    Boston, MA 02120
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Roxbury
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-03-06T15:00:00 - 2020-03-06T16:30:00

Artists interested in applying for the City of Boston's call to artists for the Ruggles Corridor integrated Public Art Project are invited to join us for a site walk-through and question and answer session on Friday from 3 - 4:30 p.m.

The walk will start at the Dewitt Center (122 Dewitt Drive, Boston, MA 02120) and proceed down Ruggles Street. 

March 6, 2020
  • 3:00pm - 4:30pm
  • The Dewitt Center
    122 Dewitt Drive
    Boston, MA 02120
  • Contact:
    Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture
  • Price:
    FREE
  • Neighborhood:
    Roxbury
  • Event Type:
    Art
  • Posted:
2020-03-06T15:00:00 - 2020-03-06T16:30:00
Subscribe to Art
Back to top