Welcome to the Fenway Cultural District Calendar!

Check out what's happening in the District!


Search by Date:
September 2006 / October 2006 / November 2006 / December 2006

Or by Venue:
Berklee College of Music / Boston Arts Academy / The Boston Conservatory / Boston Symphony Orchestra / Emmanuel College / The First Church of Christ, Scientist / Harvard School of Public Health / Huntington Theatre Company / Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum / Mary Baker Eddy Library for the Betterment of Humanity / MassArt Galleries / Museum of Fine Arts, Boston / New England Conservatory / Northeastern University Center for the Arts / School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston / Simmons College / Wheelock Family Theatre / YMCA


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JULY 2006

Berklee College of Music
Swingin' in Mother's Rest
Wednesdays: July 12, 19 & 26, 2006, from 6:30 pm to 8:00 pm
Mother's Rest Park, corner of Boylston Street and The Fenway
The Back Bay Fens will swing on three Wednesday evenings in July when Berklee College of Music, Park Arts, and the Fenway Civic Association present the popular Swingin’ in Mothers Rest free outdoor
concert series. An exciting lineup of noted Berklee students, professors and alumni will perform for Boston area residents and families in the Mothers Rest Playground, located down the stairs from the Boylston St. bridge in the Back Bay Fens, at the corner of Boylston St. and The Fenway. Folding chairs, blankets, and picnics are encouraged. The eighth annual series is co-sponsored by Bank of America, the Mission Hill/Fenway Neighborhood Trust, and Piano Forte.
Wednesday, July 12 - Singer Robin McKelle (at right) and Friends, with selections from the Great American Songbook. Wednesday, July 19 - The Igmar Thomas Band. Twenty-four year-old trumpet player and a recent Berklee graduate, Igmar Thomas has already been a member of the Lionel Hampton Big Band, and has performed with Clark Terry, Roy Hargrove, Joe Lovano, Jon Faddis, and Avery Sharp, among many others.
Wednesday, July 26 - Berklee Summer Jazz Workshop directed by Terri Lynne Carrington. For more info on Berklee, visit them online at www.berklee.edu.

The Boston Arts Academy

For more info on the activites and performances at the Boston Arts Academy, visit them online at www.boston-arts-academy.org.

The Boston Conservatory
For more information on this or any other theatre, music or dance shows at The Boston Conservatory, visit them online at www.bostonconservatory.edu.

Boston Symphony Orchestra
To buy tickets or for more information, call the BSO at 617-266-1200, or visit them online at www.bso.org

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

Henrik Håkansson, Artist-in-Residence
June 24 - September 10, 2006
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 280 The Fenway
Swedish artist Henrik Håkansson uses a variety of media to explore environmental issues. He is a romantic conceptualist who keenly observes mankind's contradictory relationship to Nature. Through his observations, he aims to close the gap with nature and to make the viewer receptive to natural processes. The artist has created installations in countries around the world including France, Italy, Germany, Japan, the US and the Netherlands. Håkansson began his residency at the Gardner Museum in March of 2003 and will return this summer to install a new project. For more information on the one-of-a-kind Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, visit them online at www.gardnermuseum.org


Mary Baker Eddy Library for the Betterment of Humanity
New Exhibit Features Young Photographers
Contest yields exhibit displaying over 70 photographs by Boston schoolchildren
Opening February 16th - ONGOING
The Mary Baker Eddy Library, 200 Massachusetts Avenue
The Mary Baker Eddy Library is pleased to announce the opening of a new photography exhibit. The exhibit is the culmination of a contest in which the Library distributed single-use cameras to area schoolchildren
and invited them to photograph their daily lives. More than 70 children, ages 10-17, participated in the contest, from Boston-area schools and community programs. The exhibit, which is free and open to the public, opens on February 16 and will include at least one photo from every student in the contest as well as the three contest winners. For more information on the plentiful programs of the Mary Baker Eddy Library, visit www.marybakereddylibrary.org.

Massachusetts College of Art
Midway Show
June 19th through July 14th, 2006
Bakalar Gallery, 621 Huntington Ave/Avenue of the Arts
Each summer, Massachusetts College of Art presents an exhibition of graduate student work at the midpoint of their Masters in Fine Arts studies. This year?s show features work across various disciplines including painting, photography, sculpture, installation and multimedia. For more information call 617-879-7333 For more info on MassArt exhibitions, classes, lectures or other offerings, visit www.massart.edu

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Degas to Picasso: Modern Masters
January 18th through July 23rd, 2006
MFA's Torf and Trustman Galleries, 465 Huntington Avenue/Avenue of the Arts
"Degas to Picasso: Modern Masters" is an ambitious, kaleidoscopic survey of European art from 1900 to the 1960s. From the late works of Degas, Gauguin, Munch, and Rodin through the last creative outbursts of Giacometti and Picasso, the exhibition explores major figures in twentieth-century Europe, from late impressionism and symbolism to mid-century modernism. The School of Paris is represented by Matisse and intriguing artists such as Berman, Despiau, and Zadkine. International Surrealist works include paintings and works on paper by Spaniards Dali and Miró, Belgians Delvaux and Magritte, and the Chilean-born painter Matta. American expatriates active in France, Calder and Man Ray, are an integral part of this complex modernist mosaic. Entry to "Degas to Picasso: Modern Masters" is included in general admission; no special exhibition tickets required. For more info on the MFA's exhibitions, programs and other activities, visit them online at www.mfa.org.
Americans in Paris 1860-1900
Sunday, June 25 - Sunday, September 24
Explore the romance and magnetic attraction of the French capital to nineteenth-century American artists through the irresistible “Americans in Paris.” The influence of this cosmopolitan city is evident in the vibrant paintings and sculpture by some of America’s most celebrated artists, including James McNeill Whistler, John Singer Sargent, Thomas Eakins, and Mary Cassatt. The exhibition explores paintings Americans made and displayed in Paris, including Whistler’s Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 1: Portrait of the Artist's Mother and Sargent’s Madame X; portraits of Americans in Paris made by their compatriots; images of the city itself by such painters as Childe Hassam, Henry Ossawa Tanner, and Sargent; depictions of Americans “at home” in Paris by Cassatt and others; and views of several popular summer art colonies. This major exhibition makes its US debut at the MFA. For more info on the MFA's exhibitions, programs and other activities, visit them online at www.mfa.org. (photo above: John Singer Sargent, Madame X (Madame Pierre Gautreau), 1883-84. Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Arthur Hoppock Hearn Fund, 1916)

New England Conservatory
For more information, call the NEC Concert Line at (617) 585-1122 or visit NEC on the web at
www.newenglandconservatory.edu/concerts

Wheelock Family Theatre
To contact WFT directly please call the Box Office at 617-879-2300 or contact tickets@wheelock.edu. WFT is online at www.wheelock.edu/wft

Wheelock Towne Art Gallery
Towne Art Gallery, 200 The Riverway
For additional information contact Erica Licea-Kane at elicea-kane@wheelock.edu or at 617-879-2219
www.wheelock.edu/art/arthome.htm


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AUGUST 2006

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Henrik Håkansson, Artist-in-Residence
June 24 - September 10, 2006
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 280 The Fenway
Swedish artist Henrik Håkansson uses a variety of media to explore environmental issues. He is a romantic conceptualist who keenly observes mankind's contradictory relationship to Nature. Through his observations, he aims to close the gap with nature and to make the viewer receptive to natural processes. The artist has created installations in countries around the world including France, Italy, Germany, Japan, the US and the Netherlands. Håkansson began his residency at the Gardner Museum in March of 2003 and will return this summer to install a new project. For more information on the one-of-a-kind Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, visit them online at www.gardnermuseum.org

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Americans in Paris 1860-1900
Sunday, June 25 - Sunday, September 24
Explore the romance and magnetic attraction of the French capital to nineteenth-century American artists through the irresistible “Americans in Paris.” The influence of this cosmopolitan city is evident in the vibrant paintings and sculpture by some of America’s most celebrated artists, including James McNeill Whistler, John Singer Sargent, Thomas Eakins, and Mary Cassatt. The exhibition explores paintings Americans made and displayed in Paris, including Whistler’s Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 1: Portrait of the Artist's Mother and Sargent’s Madame X; portraits of Americans in Paris made by their compatriots; images of the city itself by such painters as Childe Hassam, Henry Ossawa Tanner, and Sargent; depictions of Americans “at home” in Paris by Cassatt and others; and views of several popular summer art colonies. This major exhibition makes its US debut at the MFA. For more info on the MFA's exhibitions, programs and other activities, visit them online at www.mfa.org. (photo above: John Singer Sargent, Madame X (Madame Pierre Gautreau), 1883-84. Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Arthur Hoppock Hearn Fund, 1916)


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SEPTEMBER 2006

Boston Symphony Orchestra


Huntington Theatre Company
August Wilson’s
Radio Golf
Directed by Kenny Leon
September 8th through October 8th, 2006
Boston University Theatre, 264 Huntington Ave/Avenue of the Arts
The final play from Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winner August Wilson, Radio Golf comes to the Huntington on its way to Broadway. It’s Pittsburgh, 1997. Mayoral hopeful Harmond Wilks has a surefire plan to revitalize the decrepit Hill District of his youth. Standing in his way is the mythical house at 1839 Wylie Avenue, and the man who claims to own it. Will commerce or culture overcome? This final chapter — depicting a fragile community wrestling with the temptations and the risks of paving over its heritage — shows that while the challenges change, the struggle endures. The late August Wilson is the celebrated author of a landmark ten-play cycle that chronicles the African-American experience through the 20th Century. This is the culmination of his extraordinary legacy. For tickets or more information, call 617-266-0800, or visit www.huntingtontheatre.org.

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
Henrik Håkansson, Artist-in-Residence
June 24 - September 10, 2006
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 280 The Fenway
Swedish artist Henrik Håkansson uses a variety of media to explore environmental issues. He is a romantic conceptualist who keenly observes mankind's contradictory relationship to Nature. Through his observations, he aims to close the gap with nature and to make the viewer receptive to natural processes. The artist has created installations in countries around the world including France, Italy, Germany, Japan, the US and the Netherlands. Håkansson began his residency at the Gardner Museum in March of 2003 and will return this summer to install a new project. For more information on the one-of-a-kind Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, visit them online at www.gardnermuseum.org

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Americans in Paris 1860-1900
Sunday, June 25 - Sunday, September 24
Explore the romance and magnetic attraction of the French capital to nineteenth-century American artists through the irresistible “Americans in Paris.” The influence of this cosmopolitan city is evident in the vibrant paintings and sculpture by some of America’s most celebrated artists, including James McNeill Whistler, John Singer Sargent, Thomas Eakins, and Mary Cassatt. The exhibition explores paintings Americans made and displayed in Paris, including Whistler’s Arrangement in Grey and Black, No. 1: Portrait of the Artist's Mother and Sargent’s Madame X; portraits of Americans in Paris made by their compatriots; images of the city itself by such painters as Childe Hassam, Henry Ossawa Tanner, and Sargent; depictions of Americans “at home” in Paris by Cassatt and others; and views of several popular summer art colonies. This major exhibition makes its US debut at the MFA. For more info on the MFA's exhibitions, programs and other activities, visit them online at www.mfa.org. (photo above: John Singer Sargent, Madame X (Madame Pierre Gautreau), 1883-84. Lent by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Arthur Hoppock Hearn Fund, 1916)

Northeastern University
For more information visit www.neu.edu


School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Lois Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns 1927-1937
September 15 through October 14, 2006
Grossman Gallery, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 230 The Fenway
Working for more than seven decades and in a wide variety of styles, Lois Mailou Jones enjoyed an extraordinary career that drew inspiration from France, Haiti, and Africa, as well as her native New England. As an African-American woman artist, she met and surmounted great challenges and earned many national and international honors. A great interest in design and color permeated her versatile and prolific career and informed her teaching at Howard University (1930-l977), where she taught painting and design for 47 years. In her lifetime, she produced a design oeuvre ranging from textile design to book illustration. Lois Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns 1927-1937 focuses on the textile designs and studies created at the outset of her career, immediately following her 1927 graduation from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. (Image at left: Lois Mailou Jones, Design for Cretonne Drapery Fabric #8, c. 1932. Watercolor on paper, 30 x 20 inches. Courtesy of the Lois Mailou Jones Pierre-Noël Trust) For more information on the exhibition, visit www.smfa.edu.


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OCTOBER 2006

Huntington Theatre Company
August Wilson’s
Radio Golf
Directed by Kenny Leon
September 8th through October 8th, 2006
Boston University Theatre, 264 Huntington Ave/Avenue of the Arts
The final play from Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award winner August Wilson, Radio Golf comes to the Huntington on its way to Broadway. It’s Pittsburgh, 1997. Mayoral hopeful Harmond Wilks has a surefire plan to revitalize the decrepit Hill District of his youth. Standing in his way is the mythical house at 1839 Wylie Avenue, and the man who claims to own it. Will commerce or culture overcome? This final chapter — depicting a fragile community wrestling with the temptations and the risks of paving over its heritage — shows that while the challenges change, the struggle endures. The late August Wilson is the celebrated author of a landmark ten-play cycle that chronicles the African-American experience through the 20th Century. This is the culmination of his extraordinary legacy. For tickets or more information, call 617-266-0800, or visit www.huntingtontheatre.org.

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
A Bronze Menagerie: Mat Weights of Early China
October 6, 2006 - January 14, 2007
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 280 The Fenway
A remarkable and mysterious group of small bronze sculptures from China’s Warring States Period and Han Dynasty (475 BC–AD 220) depicts bears, felines, rams, deer, and other creatures both real and imaginary. Made in sets of four and often filled with lead, these sculptures were used to weigh down seating mats and game boards, and may also have delineated sacred tomb spaces. These mat weights have been little studied, and this exhibition and catalogue will consider their function, style, and broader ritual and cosmological significance. For more information on the one-of-a-kind Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, visit them online at www.gardnermuseum.org

School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Lois Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns 1927-1937
September 15 through October 14, 2006
Grossman Gallery, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 230 The Fenway
Working for more than seven decades and in a wide variety of styles, Lois Mailou Jones enjoyed an extraordinary career that drew inspiration from France, Haiti, and Africa, as well as her native New England. As an African-American woman artist, she met and surmounted great challenges and earned many national and international honors. A great interest in design and color permeated her versatile and prolific career and informed her teaching at Howard University (1930-l977), where she taught painting and design for 47 years. In her lifetime, she produced a design oeuvre ranging from textile design to book illustration. Lois Mailou Jones: The Early Works: Paintings and Patterns 1927-1937 focuses on the textile designs and studies created at the outset of her career, immediately following her 1927 graduation from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. (Image at left: Lois Mailou Jones, Design for Cretonne Drapery Fabric #8, c. 1932. Watercolor on paper, 30 x 20 inches. Courtesy of the Lois Mailou Jones Pierre-Noël Trust) For more information on the exhibition, visit www.smfa.edu.

Wheelock Family Theatre
Holes
Armando Carlo-Gonzalez as Stanley Yelnats, Daniel Reulbach as Zero.based on Louis Sachar's award winning novel
Directed by Susan Kosoff
October 27 - November 26

Stanley Yelnats isn't a bad boy-he's a good kid with lousy luck. Found guilty of a crime he doesn't commit, Stanley chooses to serve out his sentence at Camp Green Lake. However, the detention center delivers nothing promised by its name. Here, in the blistering desert heat, the only activity is digging holes-huge holes-under the watchful eye of a sinister warden. It doesn't take long for Stanley to realize that there's more than character improvement going on at Camp Green Lake.

Holes is really two stories: one chronicles the unfortunate life of Stanley Yelnats and the other is a tall tale about Stanley's great-great-grandfather, cursed by the gypsy, Madame Zeroni, and fated to meet his end with Kissing Kate Barlow, a feared outlaw of the Wild West. Holes succeeds at blending outlandish humor with poignant and heartwarming scenes, dramatizing themes of belonging, courage, friendship, and the development of a sense of self.

Tickets: $23, $19, $15. To purchase, contact the Box Office: 617-879-2300 or tickets@wheelock.edu. More information online at www.wheelock.edu/wft

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NOVEMBER 2006

Huntington Theatre Company

Rabbit Hole by David Lindsay-Abaire
November 3rd through December 3rd, 2006
Boston University Theatre, 264 Huntington Ave/Avenue of the Arts

Becca and Howie had the perfect life — a great marriage, a beautiful house. But after a tragic accident threatens to tear apart their family, the couple faces tough questions about themselves, their relationships, and their place in the universe. As improbably funny as it is heartbreaking, Rabbit Hole received great acclaim during its Broadway run earlier this year, and was nominated for five 2006 Tony Awards. Playwright of the smash hits Fuddy Meers and Kimberly Akimbo, David Lindsay-Abaire was born and raised in South Boston.For tickets or more information, call 617-266-0800, or visit www.huntingtontheatre.org.

Berklee College of Music
Phil Wilson & the Berklee Rainbow Band Present A Berklee Jazz Festival
November 30, 8:15 p.m.
Berklee Performance Center, 136 Massachusetts Ave

Professor Phil Wilson and the internationally acclaimed Berklee Rainbow Band and special guest saxophonist Andy McGhee present A Berklee Jazz Festival, Thursday, November 30, 8:15 p.m., at the Berklee Performance Center. Wilson is a world-renowned trombonist and director of the Berklee Rainbow Band, which he formed in 1965 during his first year on the faculty at Berklee. Prior to that, Wilson was well known as a trombonist and a big band arranger, recording with Woody Herman, Sarah Vaughan, Louis Armstrong, Tony Bennett and the Dorsey Brothers.Berklee Professor Emeritus Andy McGhee, who received an honorary doctor of music degree from Berklee in 2006, is an internationally renowned saxophonist and educator. Tickets are $5 for the general public ($1 for students day of the concert). For more information, please call the box office at 617-747-2261 or visit www.berkleepbc.com. The BPC is wheelchair accessible.


Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
A Bronze Menagerie: Mat Weights of Early China
October 6, 2006 - January 14, 2007
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 280 The Fenway
A remarkable and mysterious group of small bronze sculptures from China’s Warring States Period and Han Dynasty (475 BC–AD 220) depicts bears, felines, rams, deer, and other creatures both real and imaginary. Made in sets of four and often filled with lead, these sculptures were used to weigh down seating mats and game boards, and may also have delineated sacred tomb spaces. These mat weights have been little studied, and this exhibition and catalogue will consider their function, style, and broader ritual and cosmological significance. For more information on the one-of-a-kind Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, visit them online at www.gardnermuseum.org


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DECEMBER 2006

Massachusetts College of Art
Annual Holiday Sale
December 4–9, December 4–9, 10 a.m.– 7 p.m.
Tower Building Lobby, 621 Huntington Avenue/Avenue of the Arts

Holiday shoppers looking for interesting and unusual gifts won't want to miss MassArt's Annual Holiday Sale from Monday, December 4th through Saturday, December 9th. An annual tradition since 1983, this weeklong event features fine art and contemporary craft from over 150 MassArt students and alumni. Come early for the best choice of original ceramics, glass, painting, prints, photography, fiber art and jewelry. Profits go to the artists and to support student scholarships. Sponsored by Student Activities and Programs. VISA, Mastercard, cash and checks accepted. For information: 617-879-7710 or www.massart.edu.

School of the Museum of Fine Arts
December Sale
December 6–11, 2006
School of the Museum of Fine Arts, 230 The Fenway

The 26th annual December Sale at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (SMFA), offers contemporary art collectors and holiday gift-shoppers the opportunity to purchase more than 4,000 works of art by more than 800 established and emerging artists, including internationally known Museum School alumni and faculty, affiliated artists, and current students. The largest public art sale in New England, this popular and dynamic event features artwork in a diverse range of media—from paintings, sculpture, and photographs to jewelry, ceramics, and textiles—that rotates on a daily basis. Proceeds benefit artists and SMFA student scholarships. For more information, visit www.smfa.edu or call 617-369-3204.

Berklee College of Music
Sovereign Bank Music Series @ Berklee: The Music of Marcus Miller
December 8, 8:15 p.m.
Berklee Performance Center, 136 Massachusetts Avenue

The Sovereign Bank Music Series at Berklee continues with multi-Grammy Award-winning bassist, producer, and film composer Marcus Miller, Friday, December 8, at 8:15 p.m., at the Berklee Performance Center, 136 Massachusetts Ave., Boston. Miller and two Berklee student groups he has shaped and rehearsed throughout the preceding week will perform music associated with Miller’s extraordinary career. General admission tickets are $25; seniors $18.75. Acclaimed bassist, composer, producer, band leader, and multi-instrumentalist Marcus Miller is a true musical renaissance man. He has over 400 recording credits to his name, a short list of which includes Wayne Shorter, McCoy Tyner, Frank Sinatra, Aretha Franklin, Elton John, Grover Washington Jr., Donald Fagen, Bill Withers, Chaka Khan, Meshell Ndegeocello, and LL Cool J. Tickets are available at the Berklee box office or through Ticketmaster at 617-931-2000. For more information, please call 617-747-2261 or visit www.berkleebpc.com.

Berklee @ Bob's
December 4 & 11, 7-10 pm
Bob's Southern Bistro, 614 Columbus Ave

Berklee at Bob's -- the free Monday night concert series at Bob's Southern Bistro -- continues in December as the Bill Banfield Band welcomes an all-star lineup of guest performers from Berklee's world-renowned faculty. The band will play a variety of styles including straight ahead and contemporary jazz, R&B, funk, and pop. December 4 - Matt Glaser (Band leader, The Wayfaring Strangers; performances with Stephane Grappelli, Yo Yo Ma, Gunther Schuller, others) December 11 - Dave Fiuczynski (Band leader, The Screaming Headless Torsos; performances with Meshell Ndegeocello, Vernon Reid, Branford Marsalis, others)

Boston Symphony Orchestra
Boston Pops & Barenaked Ladies
December 14, 1:00 & 8:00 p.m.
Symphony Hall, 301 Massachusetts Avenue

Boston Pops Conductor Keith Lockhart will lead the Pops, joined by the alt-rock band Barenaked Ladies, in special public holiday performancea December 14 at Symphony Hall. BNL will blend their laid-back sound with the power and warmth of “America’s Orchestra” in Christmas and Hanukkah highlights of
their 2004 album Barenaked for the Holidays. Though this is the Pops’ first collaboration with BNL, Keith Lockhart and the Boston Pops have previously worked with Guster, My Morning Jacket, and Aimee Mann.

Tickets are currently on sale for the Boston Pops Holiday Season and may be purchased at The Symphony Hall box office, by calling SymphonyCharge at 617-266-1200 or 888-266-1200, or online at
www.bostonpops.org. There is a $5 per ticket handling fee for tickets ordered by telephone or online. Tickets for the 1 p.m. concert on December 14 are $25, $33, $40, $48, $65, and $83. Tickets for the 8 p.m. concert on December 14 are $32, $39, $51, $65, $88, and $115.

Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum
A Bronze Menagerie: Mat Weights of Early China
October 6, 2006 - January 14, 2007
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 280 The Fenway
A remarkable and mysterious group of small bronze sculptures from China’s Warring States Period and Han Dynasty (475 BC–AD 220) depicts bears, felines, rams, deer, and other creatures both real and imaginary. Made in sets of four and often filled with lead, these sculptures were used to weigh down seating mats and game boards, and may also have delineated sacred tomb spaces. These mat weights have been little studied, and this exhibition and catalogue will consider their function, style, and broader ritual and cosmological significance. For more information on the one-of-a-kind Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, visit them online at www.gardnermuseum.org



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