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Free online lectures: Explore a world of ideas

Funding provided by:
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The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston

Founded in 1936 as the Boston Museum of Modern Art—a sister institution to New York’s MoMA—the museum was conceived as a laboratory where innovative approaches to art could be championed. The museum established a reputation for identifying important new artists, and in pursuit of this mission, eventually parted ways with MoMA and changed its name to the Institute of Contemporary Art in 1948. As the ICA’s reputation grew around the nation, it paved the way for other institutes and museums of “contemporary art” as well as artists’ spaces and alternative venues. For more than 75 years, the ICA has presented contemporary art in all media—visual arts, performance, film, video, and literature—and created educational programs that encourage appreciation for contemporary culture. At the close of the 1990s, several innovative programs strengthened the ICA’s public role, including the teen filmmaking program Fast Forward, and ICA/Vita Brevis, whose temporary installations throughout public spaces in Boston drew critical and popular acclaim. In 2006, the ICA opened its visionary new building, designed by Diller Scofidio + Renfro, on the Boston waterfront. In its new facility, the ICA has expanded the scope and size of its exhibitions and programs—increasing its audiences tenfold and serving as a catalyst for contemporary art in Boston. Throughout its history the ICA has been at the fore in identifying and supporting the most important artists of its time and bringing them to public attention. Among the artists whose work has been introduced to U.S. audiences by the ICA are Georges Braque, Oskar Kokoschka, and Edvard Munch. Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, Laurie Anderson, and Roy Lichtenstein were each the subject of ICA presentations early in their careers. More recently, the ICA was pivotal in the careers of numerous visual and performing artists including Bill Viola, Kara Walker, Cildo Meireles, Cindy Sherman, Cornelia Parker, Shepard Fairey, Young Jean Lee, Jay Scheib, Trajal Harrell, and Rashaun Mitchell.

https://www.icaboston.org/about/history

  • This summer, the sorts of tragedies that have long befallen many in our country and the world came at a pace and a pitch that felt especially relentless. In response to this violence, racial injustice, and trauma, we have invited writers, artists, and leading creative voices to come together for Powerful Words, an evening of readings, reflections, and community. On Thursday, September 8, luminaries including WGBH President and CEO Jon Abbott, Huntington Theater Managing Director Michael Maso, author Gregory Maguire, Boston Poet Laureate Danielle Legros Georges, Harvard Hip-Hop Archive Director Marcy Morgan, award-winning chef Joanne Chang, WBUR journalist and host Meghna Chakrabarti, community powerhouse Robert Lewis, Jr., and many more will gather as a creative community to read in front of the Grandstand* on our waterfront plaza and find strength and healing through “Powerful Words.” In a July speech in Dallas, President Obama implored us all to fight cynicism, to see in each other a common humanity and shared dignity, and to look at the world though each other’s eyes. Artists have a unique and vitally important role to do just this: to see differently, to open minds, and to build empathy. We hope you will join us for this evening of Powerful Words.
    Partner:
    The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston