Exhibitions & Talks

Upcoming Exhibitions, Actions, & Talks

2024

April 11 – June 8 2024
Tapped In: Moving Hearts and Minds through Art and Science
The Umbrella Arts Center
“TAPPED IN” is an innovative art installation at the intersection of climate communications, art, and science that combines outdoor public art with an indoor educational gallery display. Inspired by the concept of ‘edges’ in ecosystems, “TAPPED IN” celebrates the dynamic intersections where diverse influences meet, bringing together ten artist-scientist pairs to offer fresh perspectives on climate change, CO2 mitigation and action.

Artist-Scientist participant pairs include: Adria Arch & Sara Seager, Freedom Baird & Daniella Malin, Lisa Barthelson & Juliana Birnbaum, Casey Figueroa & Terrius Harris, Raquel Fornasaro & John Sterman, Mags Harries & Szeinbaum, Michelle Lougee & William Moomaw, Ilana Manolson & Janine Benys, Victor Pacheco & Paul Krishen, Nancy Selvage & Josh Goldman, and Artists from Elevated Thought, in collaboration with Marquis Victor and Terrius Harris.

Opening reception and Artist Walkabout Thursday, April 11, 5-7:30pm
Youth Forward Climate Action Day, Saturday, April 20, 1-5pm
The Umbrella Arts Center, 40 Stow Street, Concord, MA 01742

October 5 2023 – May 19 2024
The Myth of Normal: A Celebration of Authentic Expression
MAAM – MassArt Art Museum
The Myth of Normal: A Celebration of Authentic Expression looks at social and emotional norms that have been codified over our collective past. Focusing on the achievements and creative abundance of MassArt’s alumni, this exhibition is guest-curated by Mari Spirito ’92 in celebration of the 150th anniversary of the college. This exhibition takes inspiration from Dr. Gabor Maté and Daniel Matés’s 2022 book of the same title, which looks at the importance of authentic expression as a means to heal. Spirito argues through this exhibition that art plays a pivotal role in overall wellness, as an avenue and language for self-expression.

ARTISTS: Freedom Baird M’16, Paul S. Briggs M’16, Nancy Callan ’96, Cedric Douglas ’11, Rashin Fahandej ’06, Kate Finneran ’92, Stephen Hamilton ’09. Maya Hayuk ’91, Gail Hendricks-Hill ’75, Steve Locke ’97, M’01, H’22, Christian Marclay ’80, Chandra Méndez-Ortiz M’05. Tony Millionaire ’81, Felipe Ortiz ’09, Shannon Palmer ’92, Loretta Park M’16, Jack Pierson ’86, Luther Price ’87, Erin M. Riley ’07, Heather Rowe ’93, Mark Skwarek ’01 and Joseph Hocking, Mimi Smith ’63, Corinne Spencer ’10, Richard Streitmatter-Trần ‘03, Tabboo! ’81, Kathleen White ’86, Jackie Winsor ’65, Ezra Wube ’04, Bahar Yürükoğlu M’11, Zhidong Zhang M’20

MAAM is free and open to the public
Hours: Thurs 12–8pm, Friday 12–5pm, Sat & Sun 11 AM–5pm
MAAM, MassArt Art Museum, 621 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA

PAST EVENTS

2023

Opening Party: The Myth of Normal
Thursday, Oct 5, 6-8pm

Free, advanced registration required, register here!
Join the MassArt Art Museum (MAAM) for the opening of their newest exhibition, The Myth of Normal: A Celebration of Authentic Expression which showcases the achievements and creative abundance of MassArt’s alumni in celebration of the 150th anniversary of the college. Experience the exhibition through the perspectives of MassArt student educators during short, conversational pop-up talks in the galleries, and get creative in the Barkan Big Ideas Studio. It’s a party so small bites and a signature drink are on the menu.

December 4 2023 – January 21 2024
The Art of the Quilt
Menino Arts Center
An exciting show of non-traditional quilts. Contemporary, improvisational, off-the-grid, off-center, minimalist, asymmetrical, high contrast, negative space focus, free-motion style, questioning established forms. Juried by Stephanie Shore. Curated by Sasja Lucas, and featuring 43 pieces from 31 different artists from Massachusetts, Connecticut, New York, Ohio, Missouri, and New Mexico.
I’m thrilled to have a piece in this show!
Artists reception: Saturday, December 9, 3-5 pm
Menino Arts Center
26 Central Ave, Hyde Park, MA

July 7 – August 27, 2023
Automatic Aura
Installation Space
AUTOMATIC AURA, an exhibition by FeministFuturist artists collective, weaves together overlapping themes of hybrid identity, human v animal constructs, the human voice v the bot, and traditional v contemporary gender roles and identities, including those explored in Legacy Russell’s Glitch Feminism Manifesto:

“an error in a social system that has already been disturbed by economic, racial, social, sexual, and cultural stratification and the imperialist wrecking-ball of globalization—processes that continue to enact violence on all bodies—may not, in fact, be an error at all, but rather a much-needed erratum.”

FeministFuturist strives to continually define and redefine themselves as artists, by challenging the media and technologies most appropriate to their message. The Collective’s goal for AUTOMATIC AURA is twofold:

“to probe the cognitive, spiritual, and physical effects of transformative technological advances on our lives and the existence of planet Earth; and to challenge ourselves to present new feminist imagery using recent technologies — including AR and VR—alongside traditional media.”

FeministFuturist collective: Carolyn Wirth, Karen Meninno, Freedom Baird, Christina Balch, Marjorie Kaye, and Homa Sarabi

Opening Reception: Friday, July 7, 5-8pm
Installation Space Hours: Fridays: 5-8pm, Saturdays & Sundays: 12-6pm
49 Eagle Street, North Adams, MA 01247

2022

November 12 – December 23, 2022
Annual Members’ Exhibition
The Brush Art Gallery & Studios and New England Sculptors Association
Artists included this year are: Louise Abbott, Elisa Adams, Freedom Baird, Susan Barahal, Donna Berger, Linda Cargiuolo, Rose Carney, Martha Chason-Sokol, Jody Cross-Hansen, Michael delaVega, Dave Drinon, Jane Estella, Claire Gagnon, Kevin Harkins, Chrissy Theo Hungate, David Jones, Janice Jones, Kriev, Madeleine Lord, Barbara Ludinsky, Maria Luongo, Monica McDermott, Lisa Nelson, Julie Nussbaum, Ivan Orlinsky, Matthew Reed, Paul Richardson, Daniel Rocha, Laurie Simko, Raksha Soni, Bob Stegmaier, Gay Tracy, Elisa Vanelli, Norma von Fricken, Kellie Weeks, Alan Weinstein, Tom Whiting, Sherry Winkelman, Jean Winslow, Rebecca Harriet Wisniewski, and Melanie Zibit.
Jurors:
Michael H. Lally, former President and current Vice President of Brush Art Gallery & Studios Board, former Executive Director of Whistler House Museum of Art. Erin Noonan Descoteaux, retired art instructor of Lowell Public Schools, current board member of Brush Art Gallery & Studios, former board member and collections committee member of Whistler House Museum of Art.
Reception: Saturday, December 10, 2-4pm
The Brush Art Gallery & Studios
Gallery Hours: Tues-Sat 11am-4pm, Sun 12-4pm
256 Market Street, Lowell, MA

September 9 – October 16, 2022
FeministFuturist: CURRENCY
Boston Cyberarts
Boston Cyberarts is excited to open the fall season with CURRENCY, an exhibition by the artist collective FeministFuturist on view in the gallery from Friday September 9 – Sunday October 16, 2022. This exhibition is created, curated and presented by the collective and encompasses both physical and virtual work. CURRENCY’s themes include the concept of monuments (their permanence or impermanence in physical or digital realms); Feminism in digital platforms; and ways in which a Feminist perspective can heal Earth from a male-dominated, capitalist-technological hegemony. In their own words, the FeministFuturist art collective’s founding purpose is the following: “We call on fellow artists to foment cultural change by creating visionary art. We seek to evolve culture creatively, equitably, with sustainable technologies, and with deep respect for the ecological systems of planet Earth. Feminist Futurism offers visions of coexistence, healing, and community with all living things.”
FEATURED ARTISTS: Freedom Baird, Christina Balch, Nancy Hayes, Marjorie Kaye, AK Liesenfeld, Karen Meninno and Carolyn Wirth
This exhibition was made possible in part by a grant from the Collective Futures Fund.
Opening Reception: Friday, September 16, 5-7pm
Artists’ Panel Talk: “The Feminist Future of Art”, October 11, 7-8:30pm. Register here to get the Zoom link!
Boston Cyberarts Gallery Hours: Fridays – Sundays, 12-6pm
141 Green Street, Jamaica Plain, Boston, MA

March 15 – May 14, 2022
FeministFuturist: Liminal Lab
Hess Gallery, Pine Manor College
In its newest iteration, the artists collective FeministFuturist, along with special guests, provides participatory installations, sculpture, painting, and digital experiences. Participating artists and guest artists include: Christina Balch, Freedom Baird, Karen Meninno, Marjorie Kaye, Linda Price-Sneddon, Liz Helfer, Nancy Hayes, AK Liesenfeld and Carolyn Wirth.
This exhibition was made possible in part by a grant from the Collective Futures Fund.
Artist Reception: Saturday, April 2, 2-5pm
Artist Talk: Christina Balch on Instagram Live: Thursday, April 7, 12-1pm
Quilting Circle: Thursday evenings in March & April, 5:30-8pm with Freedom Baird
Closing Reception: Saturday, May 14, 1-3pm
Check Hess Gallery viewing hours
Annenberg Library, 400 Heath Street, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467

2021

Sunday, September 19, 2021, 12-1:30pm (EST)
Urgent Questions in response to “Today’s AI” — #NewMacy Meeting #2
Conversation Series

Pangaro: Design + Conversation
Coordinated by Paul Pangaro, Professor of Practice, Human-Computer Interaction Institute, Carnegie Mellon University
With Linda-Price Sneddon and FeministFuturist collective, collaborated on question for inclusion, participated in the discussion.

Thursday, August 19, 2021, 6-7pm (EST)
Artists’ Talk with Feminist Futurist Collective
Ethos

Arranged by Krystal Kilhart, LGBTQ Site Coordinator
I was happy to join this presentation and discussion about the FeministFuturist collective’s eponymous and inugural exhibition.

Thursday, January 21, 2021, 5:30-6:30pm (EST)
Artist Talk with Freedom Baird – Shore Line Recall
Artist Lecture Series

New Art Center in Newton
Produced by Madeleine Delpha, Director of Education at the New Art Center
I’m delighted to be presenting a talk about my summer 2018 artist residency on the Boston Harbor Islands, and the book that came out of the project, Shore Line Recall: Boston Harbor Islands.

2020

August 30, 2020, 8-9pm
SUMMER SUNDAYS WITH THE SISTERS: A Variety Show
Premiere of Series Finale Episode 3
Produced by the Boston Center for the Arts and Linden Tree Productions in collaboration with co-curators and hosts, The Davis Sisters. This new online project, SUMMER SUNDAYS WITH THE SISTERS: A Variety Show was envisioned to elevate and bring together Boston artists from all disciplines for discussion, performance, and laughter during this time of great need. Episode 3, the series finale, included work from Lindsay LaPointe, Rob Flax, Victoria Awkward , Matthew Kramer, Jenna Pollack, Key’Aira Lockett, Allison Maria Rodriguez, Freedom Baird, Maya Erdelyi, Daniel Rowe, and The Davis Sisters
Here’s SUMMER SUNDAYS WITH THE SISTERS Episode 3. My segment on the Instructions Vault is at 12:42

April 9 – May 8, 2020
TAKE A STAND, Voices of NESA
Curated by Mim Fawcett, Executive Director and Chief Curator of Attleboro Art Museum
Visual art has the power to transmit profound messages and reflect the issues of the day. New England Sculptors Association (NESA) partnered with the Attleboro Arts Museum to put up the exhibition: TAKE A STAND, Voices of NESA. For the exhibition, NESA artists were asked to make their voices heard by means of sculptural forms. Housing one of the largest gallery spaces between Boston and Providence, the Attleboro Arts Museum has evolved from its modest, grassroots beginnings, into an impressive, robust and dynamic arts organization, serving as a cultural anchor for the revitalization of the City of Attleboro. The Museum is a privately supported, non-profit arts institution whose core commitment to Arts for Everyone guides the Museum’s programs and operations.
Artists: Elisa Adams, Anthony Alemany, Anne Alexander, Michael Alfano, Freedom Baird, William Bloomfield, Cassie Doyon, Larry Elrado, Jane Estella, Shawn Farrell, Liz Sibley Fletcher, Barbara Fletcher, Claudia Flynn, Zvi Goldman, Douglass Gray, Gints Grinbergs, Linda Hoffman, Cindy Journey, Betty Ann Libby, Elizabeth Lind, Madeleine Lord, Valery Mahuchy, Andrea Olmstead, Tone Ørvik, Stacy Parker, R. Douglass Rice, Ruth Rosner, Joshua Ruder, Stacy Latt Savage, Mara Sara, Alan Spivack, Derrick Te Paske, Robin Lost, Alan Weinstein, Melanie Zibit
Initially produced as an in-person exhibition, due to the pandemic the show was presented online on the website of the Attleboro Arts Museum

February 8 – April 5, 2020
FeministFuturist
Curated by Karen Meninno and Carolyn Wirth
The past several years have seen a resurgence, reappraisal and reaffirmation of feminism. At the same time, we are now living the hurricane impact predicted by Alvin and Heidi Toffler in Future Shock (1970): accelerating cultural thrust creates an unfamiliar world into which we are launched like astronauts into an unknown dimension. Women artists are now uniquely poised to be cultural powerbrokers whose viewpoints on the future of society and the planet shape the world stage itself, instead of merely filling seats in the audience. FeministFuturist seeks to add to the cultural conversation about the future from a feminist point of view, inserting female-centered narratives into future worlds. The exhibition includes work that speculates on future earth communities and the potential lives of beings of all kinds, while offering visions of coexistence, healing, and community.
Artists: Freedom Baird, Amy Borezo, Nadine Boughton, Linda Leslie Brown, Marisa Chentakul, Julia Daviy, Magda Fernandez, KSpace (Karen Meninno and Carolyn Wirth), Brenna Leaver, AK Liesenfeld, Linda Price-Sneddon and Genevieve Quick

Opening Reception
Saturday, February 8 | 6–9 pm
FeministFuturist attire encouraged!
Mills Gallery at Boston Center for the Arts, 551 Tremont Street, Boston, MA

Young Futurist Spaceship Workshop
Saturday, February 22 | 11 am–1 pm
Mills Gallery at Boston Center for the Arts, 551 Tremont Street, Boston, MA

FeministFuturist Fashion Forum
Wednesday, March 11 | 6:30–8 pm
Mills Gallery at Boston Center for the Arts, 551 Tremont Street, Boston, MA

2019

September 1 – November 1, 2019
2019 Art Ramble: Witnessing Change
The Art Ramble is an outdoor public art installation in Concord MA’s Hapgood Wright Town Forest produced by The Umbrella in collaboration with the Town of Concord Division of Natural Resources. The 2019 exhibition’s theme was: witnessing diversity in a changing climate. Curators Jess Muise and Nancy Lippe asked: What does it mean to witness? Is it looking-on as passive bystanders? Or does witnessing require our participation, an embodied and physiological ‘bearing’? A sort of radical presence, seeing and acknowledging the presence of others – a beholding of all entities, past and present. A practice of noticing what needs attending to in order to widen our ability to hold onto for diversity in its complexity.
Participating Artists: Delanie Wise, Freedom Baird, Jen Fuchel, Karen Krolak & Nicole Harris, Karin Sanborn, Lara Wilson, Leah Medin, Lisa Link, Liz Helfer, Max Payne, Nancy Winship Milliken Studio, Paul Angiolillo, Paul Ruhlmann, Rebeccah Tuck, and Sophia Dilibero
Hapgood Wright Town Forest, Concord, MA

October 24, 2019
Human Nature Dictionary Word-Coining

2019 Connecticut Art Education Association Fall Conference
The annual conference of the Connecticut Art Education Association brings together art educators from across the state participating in sessions, workshops, roundtables, and exhibitions on topics including: Curriculum, Technology, Instructional Practices, Assessment, Lesson Ideas, Administrative Topics, and Hands-on Sessions. I was delighted to participate by offering a workshop on the Human Nature Dictionary! The workshop had to aims: to transform how participants think about humans and nature, and impact participants’ teaching practice by expanding their awareness of environmental art that is centered around language and participation.
2019 Connecticut Art Education Association Fall Conference
Farmington Marriott Hotel, 15 Farm Springs Road, Farmington, CT

October 18, 2019, 6-8pm
Outside|In 2019
13Forest Gallery

13FOREST Gallery was pleased to present their third annual Outside|In event highlighting public art around Arlington. In collaboration with the Arlington Commission for Arts and Culture and Arlington Public Art, the gallery hosted artists Freedom Baird, Michelle Lougee and Katherine Shozawa for a reception and discussion with the artists.
13Forest Gallery, 167A Massachusetts Ave, Arlington, MA 02474

June – September, 2019
Artist on site 3-6pm 7/7, 7/14, 7/21, 8/4, 8/18, 8/25, 9/8, 9/22
Community celebration and reception 9/15

Room to Grow
I was delighted to bring Room to Grow, a living installation juxtaposing native plants with human-made objects, to the Minuteman Bikeway in Arlington this summer. As artist-in-residence I was there weekly tending the installation and discussing the work. Many visitors from all walks of life stopped by to talk about humans + nature.  Installation photos are here. This project was curated by arts manager Cecily Miller, and sponsored by Arlington Public Art, a committee of the Arlington Commission for Arts and Culture. Thank you to my collaborators: Judy Otto, native plant expert and denizen of the Belmont Victory Gardens; K & J Westbard, installation assistants
Location: Minuteman Bikeway, east side of the path, between the Linwood Street parking circle and the Spy Pond Playground, Arlington, MA

Wednesday, July 10, 2019, 7-9pm
Loving Less Plastic
Presentation and discussion hosted by the Melrose Recycling Committee
With this talk and discussion we took a look at how organizations and institutions can embrace sustainability in every aspect of their operations, considered ways to love less plastic in our day-to-day lives, and took a look at some present-day artists who are working with themes of plastic, consumerism, and sustainability. Artist Freedom Baird presented her research and lead the discussion, and showed examples of loving less plastic.
Milano Center, 201 West Foster St, Melrose, MA 02176

June 14 – September 3, 2019
Reverberations / Upper Falls Greenway
Studios Without Walls

Reverberations was Studios Without Walls 20th Anniversary exhibition of site-responsive works. Participating artists on the Greenway were: Anne Alexander, Jeremy Angier & Ann Hirsch, Freedom Baird, Gail Jerauld Bos, Anne Eder, Louise Farrell, Barbara Fletcher, Grey Held, Janet Kawada, Bette Ann Libby, Stacey Piwinski, Maria Ritz & Wendy Wolf, Kerri Schmidt, Gregory Steinsieck, Anneloes van Beek.
Opening Reception: Friday, June 14, 4-6pm
This exhibition was part of the Newton Needham Regional Chamber’s initiative to revitalize the Newton Upper Falls Greenway, a former railway corridor turned bike and walking path.
Newton Upper Falls Greenway, 1225 Chestnut St, Newton, MA 02464

July 2017 – June 2019
Outdoor Sculpture Park
Catskill Interpretive Center
This is the annual Outdoor Sculpture Park exhibition of the Maurice D. Hinchey Catskill Interpretive Center whose mission is to protect and foster the environmental, cultural and economic well-being of the Catskill region. I was honored to exhibit Tree to Ground in the Sculpture Park for two years.
5096 Route 28, Mount Tremper, NY 12457
Open daily 9:30 am to 4:30 pm, Fridays 9:30 am to 6:30 pm

April 26 – June 2, 2019
Reverberations / Riverway
Studios Without Walls

Reverberations is Studios Without Walls 20th Anniversary exhibition of site-responsive works. Twenty participating artists this year!: Anne Alexander, Jeremy Angier & Anne Hirsch, Freedom Baird, Gail Jerauld Bos, Anne Eder, Louise Farrell, Barbara Fletcher, Grey Held, Janet Kawada, Bette Ann Libby, Madeline Lord, Stacey Piwinski, Maria Ritz, Kerry Schmidt, Allen Spivack, Anneloes van Beek, Joe Wight, Delanie Wise, Wendy Wolf. Join us in Riverway Park for our opening weekend during Brookline Open Studios, April 27 & 28 for free artist lead activities, tours, a reception and more!
Frederick Law Olmsted’s Riverway Park
Chapel Street, Brookline, MA, across from the MBTA Longwood stop

March 8 – April 7 2019
in-habit
Hosted by Blueprint Projects and 
Lincoln Arts Project
Blueprint Projects presented in-habit, a group exhibition co-curated by Elizabeth Moy and Wendy Wolf in their pop-up location at Lincoln Arts Project. Drawing on a variety of approaches including performance, installation and photography, in-habit takes a nuanced look at our relationship to the natural world, questions established norms, and considers how our interconnectedness is shifting with rapid man-made climate change. Participating artists include Freedom Baird, Hannah Perrine Mode, and Sandrine Schaefer.
Opening Reception: Friday, March 8, 7-9PM
Workshop: Human Nature Dictionary word-coining, Saturday March 30, 4-6pm

Lincoln Arts Project, 289 Moody Street in Waltham, MA

2018

November 3 2018 – January 18 2019
CMCA Biennial
Center for Maine Contemporary Art

Honored to participate in the Center for Maine Contemporary Art Biennial. I spent my childhood summers living with my grandparents in Tenants Harbor, ME, where the land, the ocean, and the community of fisherman, writers, and artists shaped my understanding of humans’ place in the natural world. The CMCA Biennial is a juried exhibition for artists who have a strong connection to the state of Maine. Jurors: Kate Green, Guest Director of Marfa Contemporary, Marfa, TX, and Robin K. Williams, Ford Curatorial Fellow at the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit, Detroit, MI.
Center for Maine Contemporary Art, 21 Winter Street, Rockland, ME

October 15 – November 15 2018
Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, Plastic
Artist-in-Residence at the Bancroft School

Greatly enjoyed teaching high school seniors how to make milk plastic and to present on the history of plastic in industry and art at the Bancroft School in Worcester, MA, at the invitation of Visual Arts Chair, William Chambers. The exhibition accompanying the residency – Animal, Vegetable, Mineral, Plastic – included two interventions in trees and several Human + Nature objects and images in the Bancroft Art Gallery.
110 Shore Drive, Worcester, MA 01605

June 23 – Oct 21, 2018
Grounds for Play
Fuller Craft Museum

Delighted to have been a part of Grounds for Play: Sculptures that Excite the Imagination, a juried outdoor exhibition by members of the New England Sculptors Association. The show was installed in the 22-acre woods and walking areas of the internationally renowned Fuller Craft Museum, whose collection is “at the nexus of contemporary craft and cultural meaning”.
455 Oak Street, Brockton, MA

Dates in July & August, 2018
Shore Line Recall
Boston Harbor Islands Artist in Residence
Honored to have served as artist in residence for two weeks on the Boston Harbor Islands, conducting Shore Line Recall, a participatory art project. For the project I travelled to nine islands and a boat and invited the visiting public to record with pen/pencil/paper their impressions, sensations, memories of the most vulnerable, low-lying areas of the islands which will be under water in another several decades, due to the rise in sea-level caused by climate change.  I am currently curating, organizing, and printing these impressions into a book which I will present to the City of Boston and the Parks Department as a record of future places long gone. The residency was sponsored by Boston Harbor Now, the Massachusetts Department of Conservation & Recreation, and the National Parks Service.
Here’s the schedule of my days/times on different beaches and islands
Boston Harbor Islands, Boston, MA

June 25 – Sept 9, 2018
Beyond Boundaries / Upper Falls Greenway
Studios Without Walls

Outdoor summer-long sculpture exhibition of site specific works by artists: Freedom Baird, Myrna Balk, Gail Bos, Anne Eder, Louise Farrell, Linda Hoffman, Janet Kawada, Bette Ann Libby, Madeleine Lord, Stacey Piwinski, Maria Ritz, Gregory Steinsieck, Joe Wight, Wendy Wolf. This exhibition is part of the Newton Needham Regional Chamber’s initiative to revitalize the Newton Upper Falls Greenway, a former railway corridor turned bike and walking path.
Newton Upper Falls Greenway, 1225 Chestnut St, Newton, MA 02464

April 28-June 3, 2018
Beyond Boundaries / Riverway
Studios Without Walls

Outdoor sculpture exhibition of site specific works. Artists: Freedom Baird, Myrna Balk, Gail Bos, Anne Eder, Louise Farrell, Linda Hoffman, Janet Kawada, Bette Ann Libby, Madeleine Lord, Stacey Piwinski, Maria Ritz, Gabi White, Joe Wight, and Wendy Wolf. Dedicated to the memory of our dear friend and Studios Without Walls sculptor Milan Klic.
Frederick Law Olmsted’s Riverway Park
Chapel Street, Brookline, MA, across from the MBTA Longwood stop

April 27-May 6, 2018
Hexe
Hexe (German for Witch) was a 10-day art exhibit in a 19th-century factory building (the extraordinary Arch Street factory, former home of the Threadwell Tap & Die company) organized by Anja Schütz as part of Artweek, Massachusetts’s state-wide arts festival. Anja’s description: Hexe explores Anger and Rage and Power, specifically as it pertains to female chosen/birth gender. Witches aren’t only about these expressions, but the stereotypes surrounding them often are. The show is a reaction to Patriarchy’s strictures over strong feminine emotion and its need to denigrate expressions thereof by marking it as dirty, sinful, weak, hysterical. We’ve arrived in an era where so many of us are furious and fewer of us are caring or able to contain it. The artists involved portray their strong emotions in whatever form or reason it exists.
15 Arch St, Greenfield, MA

March 24, 2018, 1-3pm
Word-Coining for the Human Nature Dictionary
Catskill Interpretive Center

Visitors were invited to infiltrate language by creating new words and imagery to show that humans are a part of nature, not separate from it. Cambridge-based artist Freedom Baird welcomed folks to the Human Nature Field Desk where they could consider the origins of the human/nature divide, learn about the Human Nature Dictionary, and coin new words and images which show that humans and nature are thoroughly interconnected!
Hosted by the North Cambridge Artists Association
Lesley University, Lunder Arts Center, Room 213, 1801 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, MA

March 4, 2018, 4-6pm
Word-Coining for the Human Nature Dictionary!
Artists from the North Cambridge Artist Association and I sat around in thoughtful silence, cooking up new words and images which show that humans are part of nature, not separate. No previous word-coining experience was required. Art supplies were available. Non-English contributions to the dictionary were welcome! And so were non-alphabet-based symbolic contributions. This is an ongoing, inclusive, experimental, poetic project in reclaiming the creation of language in order to reshape culture.
Hosted by the North Cambridge Artists Association
Lesley University, Lunder Arts Center, Room 213, 1801 Mass. Ave., Cambridge, MA

2017

September 15 – October 15, 2017
Everything You Can Imagine Is Real
Studios Without Walls hosted by Chestnut Hill Square
Studios Without Walls is a Brookline-based collaborative group of sculptors and conceptual artists who produce exhibitions of art in outdoor and public settings. The exhibit featured the works of ten local artists displayed in unique outdoor sites throughout the Chestnut Hill Square shopping center. I very much appreciated the opportunity to show We will come home.
Chestnut Hill Square, 200 Boylston St, Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts 02467

September 8 – October 9, 2017
Annual Outdoor Sculpture Exhibit
Old Frog Pond Farm & Studio
This year’s annual outdoor sculpture exhibit featured 38 works by 28 New England artists. Artists new to the farm this year included: Lydia Musco, Samantha Pasapane, Julia Tricca, Gregory J Barry, Mike Labonte,  Ray Ciemny, Freedom Baird, Ariel Matisse, Zachary Gabbard, and Jeanne Borofsky. Returnees include Lynn Horsky, Anne Eder, Bob Shannahan, Paul Matisse, Margot Stage, Gabrielle White, Joseph Wheelwright, Alicia Dwyer, Madeleine Lord, Yin Peet, BJ Andrus, Barbara Andrus, Francis Patnaude, Kevin Duffy, Melanie Zibit, Andrea Thompson, Liz Fletcher, and the curator of the exhibit and orchardist at the farm, Linda Hoffman.
38 Eldridge Road, Harvard, MA 01451

June 3 – September 24, 2017
Finding Solace in the Woods
Art on the Trails
The Southborough Open Land Foundation, in collaboration with artist Catherine Weber, invited visitors to enjoy  Art on the Trails: Finding Solace in the Woods, at the  Elaine and Philip Beals Preserve, Southborough, Massachusetts. The exhibition of sculptural installations was juried by Southborough resident Mary M. Tinti, former Curator of the Fitchburg Art Museum.  Artists exhibiting were Freedom Baird, Lisa Barthelson, Gregory Barry, Chelsea Bradway, Crystal Blanchflower, Bill Cohn, Max Francis, Miley Francis, Hadley Horner, Linda Hoffman, Lydia J Musco, Aneleise Ruggles, and Catherine Weber. Poets were invited to submit plein air poetry about the installations, and poems and images were gathered into a chapbook available as a PDF and in print.
Beals Preserve
144 Main Street, Southborough MA, (parking in the lot across the street from the preserve at Chestnut Hill Farm)

Tuesday, June 20, 2017, 7-8:30pm
Slow Plastic
Presentation and discussion presented by Sustainable Melrose
With this talk and discussion we reclaim plastic as a social and cultural construct, and consider how it can be made differently, including at home in the kitchen! We look at plastic’s historical reputation as a tawdry imposter. We dig into the meaning of “synthetic” and consider that plastic might actually come from nature. We investigate plastic’s presence in fine art as both subject and medium. And we consider the sustainability tactic of venerating plastic. Sculptor Freedom Baird will present her research and lead the discussion, and show samples of her home-made Slow Plastic dinnerware. All are welcome!
Milano Senior Center, 201 West Foster St, Melrose, MA 02176

Saturday, June 17, 2017, 1-3pm
Human Nature Dictionary Public Word-Coining
Fox Festival Parade
At this participatory art event, visitors made up new words for the Human Nature Dictionary!  The event was part of the Fox Festival Parade presented by Arlington Public Art and the Fox Library. We had a word-coining table set up, where all visitors were welcome to create new words and imagery to show that humans are a part of nature, not separate from it. No previous word-coining experience was required. Non-English contributions to the dictionary were welcome. As were non-alphabet-based, symbolic contributions. This was part of an ongoing, inclusive, experimental, poetic project in reclaiming language creation to reshape culture.
Fox Library
175 Massachusetts Avenue, Arlington, MA

Saturday, May 20, 2017, 11am-3pm
Human + Nature Nest Building at Fresh Pond Day!
More than 70 visitors came by to make participatory art at Fresh Pond Day, the City of Cambridge’s fresh water festival celebrating the Fresh Pond reservoir, surrounding wildlife, and all things environmental!  At the Human + Nature nest-building table, all visitors were welcome to create animal nests out of human-made & nature-made materials — all biodegradable!  We celebrated the pond and it’s natural inhabitants —
Fresh Pond Reservoir, 250 Fresh Pond Parkway, Cambridge, MA

Saturday, April 29, 2017, 12-2pm
Public Word Coining at the Everything You Can Imagine is Real exhibition!
Human Nature Dictionary
Visitors made participatory art at the Everything You Can Imagine is Real exhibition presented by Studios Without Walls sculpture collaborative, and hosted by the Brookline Parks Department.  Human Nature Dictionary coordinators had a word-coining table set up, where all visitors were welcome to create new words and imagery to show that humans are a part of nature, not separate from it!
Frederick Law Olmsted’s Riverway Park
Chapel Street, Brookline, MA, across from the MBTA Longwood stop

April 26-May 24, 2017
Everything You Can Imagine is Real
Studios Without Walls

Outdoor sculpture exhibition of 14 site specific works, by Jeremy Angier & Anne Hirsch, Freedom Baird, Gail Jerauld Bos, Ann Eder, Janet Kawada, Milan Klic, Bette Ann Libby, Maria Ritz, Joe Wight, Martha Winston, and Wendy Wolf. Hosted by Brookline Parks and Open Spaces. Throughout the exhibit enjoy self-guided tours, Art Treasure Hunt and Fairie House building.
Meet the artists at the opening receptions on April 29th & 30th, 11am-5pm
Frederick Law Olmsted’s Riverway Park
Chapel Street, Brookline, MA, across from the MBTA Longwood stop

Friday, March 10, 2017, 7-9pm
We the People: The Art of Advocacy
Arlington Center for the Arts

Since January 20, 2017, millions of people around the world have taken to the streets to voice their beliefs in freedom, liberty and justice for all. With great creativity, marchers have carried thoughtful, hand-made signs, hats, sandwich boards, posters, and buttons. The Arlington Center for the Arts hosted this pop-up gallery exhibit, organized by education director Sarah Buyer, as part of the conversation during this pivotal moment of social activism. The exhibition featured politically-inspired contemporary artworks and artifacts which tell the larger story of what inspires our community to action. I’m delighted to have shown a poster in the exhibition, which I designed and distributed for the Women’s Marches in cities around the world on 1/21/17.
41 Foster Street, Arlington, MA 02474

Wednesday, February 15, 2017, 10:30am-12pm
Performing Materials
105th Annual College Art Association Conference

I participated in this panel session titled Performing Materials, at CAA’s Annual Conference. Works presented included: Interactive Art Machines by Sena Clara Creston and Charles Pezeshki of Washington State University, and The First Manifesto of Surrealism and Other Restagings, by Craig McDaniel, and Jean Robertson, Herron School of Art and Design, Indiana University Purdue University, Indianapolis, and my Slow Plastic work from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Boston.
Nassau Suite East/West, 2nd Floor, New York Hilton Midtown, 1335 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY

Tuesday, January 17, 2017, 7-9pm
Art for One, Art for All: Bringing Creativity to the Masses, public art discussion
Artisan’s Asylum, Non-Profit Community Fabrication Center and Makerspace
Art is an expression of our humanity, culture, and social commentary. Museums and galleries provide sanctuary to some of our greatest cultural treasures; however, it is the accessibility of public art that administers the biggest impact, giving people from all walks of life a chance to enjoy art. In recent years, the Greater Boston area has been home to many evocative art-related initiatives. The Somerville Arts Council and the Artisan’s Asylum hosted an evening with some of the area’s most dynamic public art creators. Participating Panelists were: Ann Hirsch, Bill Turville, Drew Van Zandt, Freedom Baird, Liz LaManche, and Michael Dewberry.
Artisan’s Asylum, 10 Tyler Street, Somerville, MA, 02143

Tuesday, January 3, 2017
Alive Enough Studio (Charrette)
NuVu Innovation School
I was delighted to join Rosa Weinberg, Spyridon Ampanavos and their students as part of a studio (charrette) to explore the nature of artificial consciousness, what constitutes machine pain, and possible stances on the ethical treatment of robots. After presentations and research, students designed and built robots that responds to physical abuse and elicit a user’s empathy (or don’t!).
NuVu, 450 Massachusetts Ave, Cambridge, MA

2016

Wednesday, November 16, 2016, 3-4:30pm
MassArt Senior Seminar – Life, Art, and Money
As part of the MassArt Senior Seminar series, artist Gary Duehr and I presented on making and exhibiting Public Art, followed by a lively discussion exploring the distinctions and overlaps between public art and resistance art.
Tower Auditorium, Massachusetts College of Art and Design, 621 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115

Saturday, October 1, 2016
Somerville AgriCultural Festival at ARTFarm
I was happy to join local farmers and artists in Somerville’s first ever AgriCultural Festival – a celebration of everything we grow from the earth, and the people who grow it.  I hosted a Human + Nature Word-Coining, with the Human + Nature Field Desk. All visitors were welcome to create new words and imagery to show that humans are a part of nature, not separate from it! No previous word-coining experience was required! Non-English contributions to the dictionary were welcome, as were non-alphabet-based symbolic contributions! This was an inclusive, experimental, poetic project in reclaiming language creation to reshape culture.
ARTFarm, 10 Poplar Street, Somerville, MA 02143

July 25 – August 8, 2016, Opening Reception Aug 4
MassArt MFA Fine Arts Thesis Exhibition 2016
Featuring work from our eclectic cohort of sculptors, painters, and interdisciplinary artists who are completing our degrees this summer.  I’ll be showing the Human Nature Dictionary in its physical instantiation.
Bakalar Gallery and Design and Media Center Atrium
Massachusetts College of Art and Design, 621 Huntington Avenue, Boston MA 02115

July 23 – November 6, 2016
North Bennington Outdoor Sculpture Show
This summer the the 19th Annual NBOSS exhibition will go up in parks and public places sited around the Village of North Bennington, VT. Organized by sculptor Joe Chirchirillo, the show features works by 38 sculptors from across the USA.
Opening reception Saturday, July 23 2016 4-8pm
Exhibition on view 24 hours a day until October 23, 2016
North Bennington, VT

Saturday, June 11, 2016, 11am-3pm
Public Word Coining at Fresh Pond Day!
Human Nature Dictionary
Come make some participatory art at Fresh Pond Day, the City of Cambridge’s fresh water festival celebrating the Fresh Pond reservoir, surrounding wildlife, and all things environmental!  Human Nature Dictionary coordinators will have a word-coining table set up, and all visitors are welcome to create new words and imagery to show that humans are a part of nature, not separate from it! No previous word-coining experience required! Art supplies will be available. Non-English contributions to the dictionary are welcome! As are non-alphabet-based symbolic contributions! This is an inclusive, experimental, poetic project in reclaiming language creation to reshape culture. We’ll be happy to see you there!
Fresh Pond Reservoir, 250 Fresh Pond Parkway, Cambridge, MA

Thursday, May 5, 2016, 6-8pm
Public Word Coining with Beer and Cookies at the Artisan’s Asylum!
Human Nature Dictionary
Come make some participatory art at the Artisan’s Asylum, Somerville MA’s extraordinary, eclectic, community-minded, 40,000 square foot maker-space! You are invited to infiltrate language by creating new words and imagery to show that humans are a part of nature, not separate from it. I’ll briefly introduce the open-content Human Nature Dictionary, then we’ll sit around snacking and cooking up new words and images. No previous word-coining experience required! Art supplies will be available. Non-English contributions to the dictionary are welcome! And so are non-alphabet-based symbolic contributions! This is an inclusive, experimental, poetic project in reclaiming language creation to reshape culture. All are welcome and creative sabotage of the words and definitions we create is also welcome. Feel free to invite people! Refreshments will be provided.
Artisan’s Asylum, 10 Tyler Street, Somerville, MA, 02143

Tuesday, May 3, 2016, 6:30pm
Sustainability Incubator Exhibition & Pecha Kucha Presentations

Exhibition Open: May 3 – May 15
Come to the final presentation of student, faculty, and staff projects incubated at MassArt this semester. Featuring work from Sustainability Micro Grant winners and Jane Marsching’s Sustainability Projects class.
MassArt’s beautiful, new Design and Media Center, 1st Floor, Incubator Room, 621 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115

April 30 – May 22, 2016
Gateways – Outdoor Sculpture Exhibition
Opening reception and artist-led tours during Brookline Open Studios, April 30, 11am – 5pm
An exhibition of site-responsive sculpture at Riverway Park, Brookline, presented by Studios Without Walls sculpture collaborative, whose mission is to expand and educate audiences to appreciate, participate in, and become enriched by site-responsive sculpture, installation, and conceptual art. Curatorial committee: Bette Anne Libby, Wendy Wolf, Maria Ritz, and Freedom Baird.
Frederick Law Olmsted’s Riverway Park
Chapel Street, Brookline, MA, across from the MBTA Longwood stop

April 15 – November 19, 2016
ArtSpace Maynard’s Inaugural Outdoor Sculpture Exhibit
This is ArtSpace Maynard’s first Outdoor Sculpture Exhibit, organized by Grounds Art Committee co-chairs
Gwen Murphy and Brenda Cirioni. Opening celebration on May 14th in coordination with Second Saturdays, featuring mini open studios from 4-6pm, and a reception from 5-7pm. ArtSpace Maynard is a vibrant, non-profit community art center that houses artist’s studios, a large exhibition space, a printmaking studio, and a theater.
Artspace Maynard, 63 Summer St, Maynard, MA

Saturday, April 9 – Sunday April 24, 2016
Boston Biennial 4

The Biennial Project is tremendously proud to host The Boston Biennial 4 “A Wicked Good Juried Exhibition of Contemporary Art”. This highly anticipated fourth installment brings together artists from New England to New Zealand, selected from over 1100 entries from 28 states and 23 countries. This year, as always, the jurors are nearly as exciting as the artwork, with 20 celebrity participants such as gallery founders and Biennale veterans, local politicians and cultural leaders to reality show contestants, designers, professional artists, musicians and educators.
– – – Opening Gala reception: Saturday April 9th, 6-9pm, at Atlantic Works Gallery in East Boston
– – – Third Thursday reception: Thursday April 21, 6-9pm
– – – Closing Reception: Sunday April 24th, 4-6pm
– – – Gallery hours: Friday & Saturday, 2-6pm, or by appointment
Atlantic Works Gallery, 80 Border Street, East Boston, MA 02128

Thursday, April 7, 2016, 6:30-8pm
Public Word Coining with Wine and Cheese at MassArt’s Sustainability Incubator!
Human Nature Dictionary
Come make some participatory art at MassArt’s Sustainability Incubator in the beautiful, new Design and Media Center! You are invited to infiltrate the English language by creating new words and imagery to show that humans are a part of nature, not separate from it. MassArt MFA candidate Freedom Baird will introduce the open-content Human Nature Dictionary, then attendees will sit together snacking and cooking up new words and images. No previous word-coining experience required! Art supplies will be available, and you can bring your own as well. Feel free to invite people — all are welcome! This is a public-word coining and image making! Refreshments will be provided.
MassArt’s beautiful, new Design and Media Center, 1st Floor, Incubator Room, 621 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115

Friday March 25, 2016, 10am-7pm
2016 New England Graduate Media Symposium – Assembling Bodies: Exchanges in Collaboration
This symposium will showcase projects that explore collaboration as a subject and selected graduates will engage in panel discussions surrounding collaborative methods of artistic production that raise questions about process, conflict, community engagement, agency and authorship. Our objective is to challenge how we think about various models and theoretical frameworks relating to collaboration and share these new approaches with a larger community. The keynote speaker will be Laurie Anderson. Please register in advance.
Paramount Center, Main Stage, 559 Washington Street, Boston, MA 02111

March 21 – April 15, 2016
Small Works Salon 2016: Thesis/Antithesis
A juried exhibition of artwork at the Chandler Gallery. Juror: Distinguished artist Gerry Bergstein
Reception: Sunday, April 3, 2016, 3-5 pm
The Thesis/Antithesis exhibition deals with reconciling contradictory impulses – realism and fantasy, surreal and banal, sincere and ironic, abstract and representational, natural and synthetic, geometric and organic are just a few examples. The show includes small scale 2D and 3D works, including works on paper, collages, paintings and sculptures.
Chandler Gallery, Maud Morgan Arts, 20A Sacramento Street, Cambridge, MA 02138

Tuesday, March 15, 2016, 6:30-8pm
Slow Plastic
Curated Conversations at MassArt’s Sustainability Incubator
With this talk and discussion we reclaim plastic as a social and cultural construct, and consider how it can be made differently, including at home in the kitchen! We look at plastic’s historical reputation as a tawdry imposter. We dig into the meaning of “synthetic” and consider that plastic might actually come from nature. We investigate plastic’s presence in fine art as both subject and medium. And we consider the sustainability tactic of venerating plastic. MassArt MFA candidate Freedom Baird led the discussion and showed samples of her home-made Slow Plastic dinnerware. All are welcome. Refreshments will be provided.
MassArt’s beautiful, new Design and Media Center, 1st Floor, Incubator Room, 621 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115

Saturday, March 12, 2016, time TBD
Slow Plastic
Talk at Design Incubation’s Colloquium 2.5, Pecha Kucha style, at FIT

This brief presentation was part of Design Incubation‘s fifth Design Colloquium at FIT. In this talk, Slow Plastic, we reclaim plastic as a social and cultural construct, and consider how it can be made differently, including at home in the kitchen! We look at plastic’s historical reputation as a tawdry imposter. We dig into the meaning of “synthetic” and consider that plastic might actually come from nature. We investigate plastic’s presence and impact in the design world, and our responsibility to use it sustainably. And we consider the environmental tactic of venerating plastic. The artist brought samples of her home-made Slow Plastic dinnerware.
Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT), 227 W 27th Street, New York, NY 10001

2015

June 14 – September 15, 2015
Art in the Park, Worcester, 2015
Art in the Park, Worcester is a celebration of large-scale sculptures, artists, friends, families, and community in historic Elm Park, Worcester, MA
Organized by Gloria Hall, Art in the Park Committee
Jurors: Susan Cross, curator of visual arts at MASS MoCA in North Adams, MA; Amy Podmore, Professor and Sculptor at Williams College in Williamstown, MA; and Sculptor & Environmental Artist, Steven Siegel, NY
Frederick Law Olmsted’s Elm Park
Park Ave and Highland Street, Worcester, MA

Sunday, July 19, 2015
Hopsketch for Play Day at the Lawn on D
HopSketch is an evolving drawing+hopscotch game created by the players themselves as they hop, jump, sketch, write notes, and heed notes. Conceived and implemented by artists Freedom Baird and Joe Wight, HopSketch uses simple visual motifs, inexpensive art supplies, and thoughtful directions to let visitors play, express, and consider their connection to place. Hopsketch made its Boston debut during Play Day at the Lawn on D, a day of innovative art+play activities created by artists, designers, educators and architects. Commissioned by the Massachusetts Convention Center Authority.
Lawn on D, 420 D Street, Boston, MA, 02210

July 10 – August 21, 2015
Boston Young Contemporaries
Jurors: Lucy Kim, Artist and Cofounder of Kijidome, Michelle Samour, Artist, Matt Phillips, Artist and Founder of Boston Young Contemporaries
Opening reception and awards Friday, July 10th 6-8pm
808 Gallery
808 Commonweath Ave, Boston, MA

May 9 – 31, 2015
Art Rocks Spy Pond
“Elements” An exhibit of sculpture & installation
Organized by Adria Arch, Juried by Lorri Berenberg
Opening reception: Saturday, May 9, 3-5pm, Artists talks at 3:30pm
Spy Pond Fun Day: Saturday, May 30, 1-4pm
Spy Pond Park, Arlington, MA 02474

April 25 – May 17, 2015
Studios Without Walls
“Seen/Not Seen” An exhibition of site-responsive sculpture at Riverway Park, Brookline
Organized by Bette Anne Libby, Kerri Schmidt, Wendy Wolf and Maria Ritz
Opening reception and artist-led tours during Brookline Open Studios, April 25 & 26, 11am – 5pm
Frederick Law Olmsted’s Riverway Park
Chapel Street, Brookline, MA, across from the MBTA Longwood stop

February 14 – March 14, 2015
Nave Gallery
Bite: Food as Art
Curated by Tori Costa and Sandy McDonald
Like art, food is a visual, sensory and social experience. Flavors and textures, aromas and taste are all elements that can be explored through artwork. Culture, memories and health are just some themes that can be viewed through the lens of food. Bite is an exploration of art made with food, art about food and/or food about art.
Opening Reception & Food Drive, Saturday, February 14 from 4-6pm
We will be collecting food and toiletries donations to support the Somerville Homeless Coalition’s Project Soup. A full list of needs are here.
Special Events:
Coffee Mandala Making Workshop, Hosted by Julia Tenney, Sunday, March 1; 1:00 pm-3:00 pm
Bite: Artist Talk Sunday, March 1; 3:30 pm-5:00 pm
Nave Gallery, Clarendon Hill Presbyterian Church
155 Powderhouse Blvd., Somerville, MA 02144
Directions and Parking

2014

October 11 – 24, 2014
Sculpture in the Park – Franklin Square Park, Boston
Join United South End Settlements for a sculpture and public art exhibition!
Opening celebration Saturday, October 11, from 1 – 3 pm
Corner of Washington Street and Newton Street, Boston, MA 02118
Participating Artists: Andrea Zampitella, Jessica Gandis, Milan Klic, Clyde Bango, Kyle Browne, Wendy Wolf, Freedom Baird, Monica Mitchell
Sculpture in the Park is a project of United South End Settlements, Boston Arts Commission, and the Boston Parks Department. Special thanks to our sponsors: the Friends of Blackstone/Franklin Square and the Blackstone/Franklin Square Neighborhood Association.

April 28 – May 9, 2014
Violence Transformed: Celebrating the Transformative Power of Art
Digital Display, Doric Hall, Massachusetts Statehouse
Artists Reception: Tuesday, April 29, 4-6
Images of two works will be included in the Violence Transformed 2014 Digital Display. This video will be shown on a continuous loop at all the venues during the year including the Violence Transformed show in Doric Hall.
Doric Hall, 2nd floor, Massachusetts State House, intersection of Beacon and Park St, Boston, MA 01233

March 20 – April 12, 2014
Gallery 263
Juried Exhibition of Massachusetts Artists
Guest Juror: Dina Deitsch, Curator of Contemporary Art at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum
Come see 41 works by 38 MA residents!
Opening Reception: Friday, March 28, 7-9pm
263 Pearl Street, Cambridge, MA, 02139

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