Boston is using a $3-millon grant from the Mellon Foundation for a series of temporary art installations and events across the city.
The Un-Monument program will include a "public conversation series" of talks at the Embrace on Boston Common.
These projects include a commemoration of the weekly toll of gun violence in the U.S., an immersive sculptural installation of a large Mayan pyramid highlighting the resilience of immigrant communities in Massachusetts, and live painting by local graffiti-artists alongside community dance and music events across the city.
- "Spray It Loud, Display It Proud" Series: Monumental Manifestations of Community in the Medium of Graffiti by A Trike Called Funk with local graffiti artists
- Kinfolk Monuments Project by Kinfolk, led by Idris Brewster
- Future Monument to the Trees of the Public Garden by Katherine Farrington
- Generation Peace Poles by Ruth Henry
- We Were Here Too by Roberto Mighty
- Going to Ground by LaRissa Rogers and Zalika Azim
- The Gun Violence Memorial Project by Hank Willis Thomas and MASSDesign Group
- Boston Chinatown: Stories on The Streets by Alison Yueming Qu and The Lot Next Door by Jaronzie Harris
The talks at the Embrace include:
July 31 at 5:30 p.m.: Poetry, Public Art, and the Politics of Memory
Speakers: Professor Joshua Bennett and Professor Imani PerryAugust 21 at 5:30 p.m., Ideas of America/New England
Speaker: Kerri Greenidge
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Comments
Are there any grants for
By Rwgfy
Thu, 07/18/2024 - 2:46pm
Are there any grants for routine vaccinations?
Yes.
By SwirlyGrrl
Thu, 07/18/2024 - 3:19pm
Yes.
Edited to Add: https://www.mass.gov/vaccine-information-for-the-g...
They should be covered under your healthcare plan.
Against you?
By Kaz
Thu, 07/18/2024 - 4:02pm
No, but most of us have just settled for the frequent exposure route to immunity from your bullshit.
OT: I wish
By Don't Panic
Fri, 07/19/2024 - 2:25am
I wish someone from Boston city government would apply for a grant to install permanant clocks at central nodes of Boston communities.
Surely there are modern versions of the old-timey pedestal street clocks we used to have in all our neighborhoods?
yes, should be easier to maintain
By deselby
Fri, 07/19/2024 - 3:57am
and more accurate. Solid state.
Could be solar powered and digital. Could add neighborhood notices on a LED panel.
No excuse, really
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