Exhibitions

Openings and events around the region

Connecticut

  • Art Museum, University of Saint Joseph

    1678 Asylum Ave., West Hartford, CT
    (860) 231-5399
    usj.edu/artmuseum
    W–Sa 11–4

    Through December 14: On Paper: Media and Techniques, an examination of the materials and processes used to create works of art on paper, including drawings, watercolors, and various printmaking techniques. Included works range from sixteenth century Italian drawings to contemporary Japanese prints, as well as a selection of recent acquisitions by important women artists.


  • ECOCA

    51 Trumbull St., New Haven, CT
    (203) 507-7320
    info@elycenter.org
    elycenter.org
    W, Th, Su 12–5 or by appointment

    November 10, 2024–January 5, 2025: Reflection: Remy Sosa & Merik Goma, curated by Moshopefoluwa Olagunju. Be Longing: Frank De Leon Jones & Shanti Grumbine. Self Taught: Bula, Serge D, Bill Healy, Karen Karen, Richard Knowles, curated by Michael Shortell & Emily Weiskopf. Dude Portraits: Leigh Busby. To The Touch, curated by Deborah Hesse. And more. Opening reception: Sunday, November 10, 1–3 p.m. Free and open to all.

    Merik Goma, As I wait (untitled 7), 2019, chromogenic print. At ECOCA.
    Remy Sosa, Bacon, 2024, acrylic and oil on wood. At ECOCA.

  • Fairfield University Art Museum

    Fairfield University
    200 Barlow Rd., Fairfield, CT
    (203) 254-4046
    fairfield.edu/museum
    Tu–Sa 11–4, Th 11–8

    Bellarmine Hall Galleries, through December 21: Ink & Time: European Prints from the Wetmore Collection. This exhibition samples the richness of European print culture between the late 15th and late 18th centuries through more than 50 woodcuts, engravings, and etchings Walsh Gallery (Quick Center), through December 21: Sacred Space: A Brandywine Workshop and Archive Exhibition. This exhibition of contemporary prints encourages exploration of spiritual connection, and reflection on ancestral wisdom and memory passed down through generations.

    Mikel Elam, Veil, 2019, offset lithograph and screenprint on paper. Partial gift of the Brandywine Workshop and Archives and Museum. Museum Purchase with funds from the Black Art Fund, 2022.17.13. At Fairfield University Art Museum.
    Rembrandt van Rijn, Three Trees, 1643. Etching, drypoint, and burin. Lent by the Wetmore Collection, Connecticut College. At Fairfield University Art Museum.

  • Hartford Art School Galleries

    Hartford Art School, University of Hartford
    200 Bloomfield Ave., West Hartford, CT
    (860) 768-5522
    hartford.edu/galleries
    M–Th 12–6, F-Sa 1–5

    Through December 14: Pathways: HAS Faculty Show unveils the latest creations from the esteemed faculty of the Hartford Art School. The artwork ranges from porcelain to augmented reality, and represents a collective commitment to curiosity, process, and making. Poetry Night: Thursday, November 14, 5:30–7 p.m., Joseloff Gallery. November 4–23: The First-Year Foundations Show in Silpe Gallery celebrates a new cohort of thinkers and makers at the Hartford Art School. December 6–14: HAS Holiday Sale for holiday shopping and seasonal giving. Reception: Friday, December 6, 6–8 p.m.

    Marion Belanger and Martha Lewis, Ever/After, 2024, photomontage. Courtesy of the artists. At Hartford Art School Galleries.

  • Mattatuck Museum

    144 West Main St., Waterbury, CT
    (203) 753-0381 x130
    info@mattmuseum.org
    mattmuseum.org
    M–Sa 11–5, Su 11–4

    The museum showcases American art and cultural history through its collection of over 15,000 objects, provides access to a research library and archives, hosts lectures, workshops, and community events, and offers spaces for corporate, wedding, and holiday rentals. Through December 1: Mad Geppetto’s Spooky Dioramas. Through January 5, 2025: Poskas, Father and Son. Through January 12, 2025: Federico Uribe’s Menagerie. Ongoing: O’Keeffe in Conversation.

    Georgia O’Keeffe (American, 1887–1986), Sunflower, New Mexico, I, 1935, oil on canvas. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Bequest of Georgia O’Keeffe; 1987.140. At Mattatuck Museum.

  • Spectrum Art Gallery and Artisan Store

    61 Main St., Centerbrook, CT
    (860) 767-0742
    events@spectrumartgallery.org
    spectrumartgallery.org
    W–Sa 12–6, Su 12–5. Daily: December 9–24

    Voted Best Gallery for Art and Gifts on the Shoreline with painting, mixed media, sculpture, photography. November 22, 2024–January 11, 2025: Let There Be Love. As 2024 ends, the world trembles with war, racism, health and climate change. Yet, we still hope compassion, empathy and love exist. Show spotlights this with fine art and photography and Artisans Store with seasonal pottery, glass, fiber, home décor, jewelry, gift cards, and handmade ornaments on six-foot holiday tree. Shop online: SpectrumAnytime.com with U.S. shipping.

    Louie Pisterzi, Whispers of Winter, 2024, oil on canvas. At Spectrum Art Gallery.


  • The Bruce Museum

    One Museum Dr., Greenwich, CT
    (203) 869-0376
    info@brucemuseum.org
    brucemuseum.org
    Tu–Su 10–5

    The Bruce Museum is a world-class institution that offers a changing array of exceptional exhibitions and educational programs that cultivate discovery and wonder through the power of art and science. Opening November 9: Nature’s Impressions: The Modernist Landscape. Opening November 16: The Art of Work: Painting Labor in Nineteenth-Century Denmark. Ongoing: Joel Sternfeld: American Prospects. Every Leaf & Twig: Andrew Wyeth’s Botanical Imagination. Hockney/Origins: Works from the Roy B. and Edith J. Simpson Collection. Conservation Through the Arts: Celebrating the Federal Duck Stamp. Tara Donovan: Aggregations. Gabriel Dawe: Plexus no. 43. The Robert R. Wiener Mineral Gallery. Permanent Science Galleries: Natural Cycles Shape our Land. Admission: Adults $20, Students/Sr. Citizens $15.

    Joel Sternfeld (b. 1944), Canyon Country, California, June 1983, 50 x 60″. © Joel Sternfeld. At The Bruce Museum.


  • The Mercy Gallery at The Loomis Chaffee School

    4 Batchelder Rd., Windsor, CT 
    christian_ryan@loomis.org
    loomischaffee.org/arts/mercy-gallery
    M–F 10–5, Su 1–5 (September–June)

    The Mercy Gallery invites groundbreaking artists working in a variety of media, representing diverse endeavors and cultural + geographic perspectives to share their art with the community. Open to the public. Opening November 14: Destiny Palmer: Spoken in a Language You Can’t Ignore. With bold and vibrant drawing, painting, and textile works, Palmer explores the possibility of a color system that centers history and the body.


  • Yale University Art Gallery

    1111 Chapel St., New Haven, CT
    (203) 432-0600
    artgallery.yale.edu
    Tu-F 10-5, Sat & Sun 11–5

    The Gallery’s encyclopedic holdings range from ancient times to the present day and represent cultures from around the globe. Through November 10: Year of the Dragon. Through January 5, 2025: The Dance of Life: Figure and Imagination in American Art, 1876–1917. Free and open to the public.

    Edwin Austin Abbey, Study for The Hours in the Pennsylvania State Capitol (detail), ca. 1909–11, oil on canvas. Yale University Art Gallery, Edwin Austin Abbey Memorial Collection. At Yale Universty Art Museum.


Maine

  • Bates College Museum of Art

    75 Russell St., Lewiston, ME
    (207) 786-6158
    bates.edu/museum
    M & W 10–7:30, Tu & Th–Sa 10–5

    Ongoing: Across Common Grounds: Contemporary Art Outside the Center. Drawing upon diverse styles and media from traditional craftwork to digital art, this exhibition features works by over twenty artists living across America that expand, deepen, and challenge how we cultivate and connect to land, culture, art, and one another in rural places. Through December 21: ARRAY: Recent Acquisition Series, Part 1: Jeffrey Gibson and Sarah Rowe. The first of a three-part rotation highlighting the wide variety of artworks the museum is currently collecting features a textile by Gibson (Mississippi Choctaw/Cherokee) and a print by Rowe (Lakota/Ponca).

    Yowshien Kuo, If Milkman Can Fly So Can I, 2024, acrylic and metallic leaf foil on canvas, 30 x 30″. Courtesy of the artist. At Bates College Art Museum.

  • Colby College Museum of Art

    5600 Mayflower Hill, Waterville, ME
    (207) 859-5629
    colby.edu/museum
    Tu–Sa 10–5, Su 12–5 , Th until 9, September–May

    Ongoing: Some American Stories is the newly installed thematic presentation of works from Colby’s collection in the museum’s Lunder Wing that leads visitors on a journey from before the founding of the United States to the present day. Galleries represent a different topic within the broader narrative of American art and history, reflecting a great diversity of experiences.

    Virgil Ortiz (Cochiti Pueblo), Omtua, 2023. ceramic, 32½ × 24 × 15″ (83 × 61 × 38 cm). Museum purchase from the William A. Oates Jr. ’65 Endowed Fund, 2023.045. Photo: Luc Demers. At the Colby College Museum of Art.

  • Moss Galleries

    100 Fore St., Portland, ME
    (207) 804-0459
    251 US-1, Falmouth, ME
    (207) 781-2620
    liz@elizabethmossgalleries.com
    elizabethmossgalleries.com
    Portland: Tu–Sa 10–5
    Falmouth: Tu–Sa 10–5

    Portland Gallery, through January 4, 2025: Light in Every Room: Gail Spaien & Lynne Drexler. Falmouth Gallery, through November 23: Marguerite Robichaux: Here and There, Now and Then; and Annika Earley: If You Want to be My Lover.

    Gail Spaien, Ram Island Ledge, acrylic on linen, 48 x 48″. Photo courtesy of Luc Demers. At Moss Galleries.

Massachusetts

  • Armenian Museum of America

    65 Main St., Watertown, MA
    (617) 926-2562
    info@armenianmuseum.org
    armenianmuseum.org
    Th–Su 12–6

    Ongoing: Filtered Identity: The Art of Tigran Tsitoghdzyan. Tigran is a New York-based artist whose photo-realistic paintings merge an interest in classical and modern art with an emphasis on his own experiences as a father and an immigrant. He has exhibited widely including Art Basel Miami, Cube Art Fair in Times Square, and globally in cities such as Dubai, Singapore, Zurich, and Brussels.

    Tigran Tsitoghdzyan, Mirror J, 2020, oil on canvas, 84 x 60″. At Armenian Museum of America.

  • Art Complex Museum

    189 Alden St., Duxbury, MA
    (781) 934-6634
    artcomplex.org
    W–Su 1–4

    Through January 12, 2025: American Paintings from the Art Complex Museum Collection. Hands to Work, Hearts to God: Celebrating Mother Ann Lee’s Legacy, featuring Laura Christensen. November 10, 2024–February 9, 2025: Nancy Hayes: Thought Translated into Form. Reception: Sunday, November 10, 2024, 1–4 p.m. Ongoing: Nora Valdez: Passage. Admission is always free.

    Nancy Hayes, Beyond 2, acrylic. At Art Complex Museum.

  • Atlantic Works Gallery

    80 Border St., East Boston, MA
    (857) 302-8363
    contact@atlanticworks.org
    atlanticworks.org
    F–Sa 2–6 or by appointment

    November 2–30: johngreinerferris/november2024/mixedmedia, mixed media by John Greiner-Ferris, and POLLINATION: BODY AND SOUL, painting and mixed media by Dominick Takis. Opening reception: Sunday, November 3, 2–5 p.m. Second reception and artists talks: Thursday, November 14, 6–9 p.m. December 7–28: Jingle Bells, Batman Smells, Eric Hess and elfin friends. Opening reception: Saturday, December 7, 5–8 p.m. Third Thursday reception and artist talk: December 19, 6–9 p.m.

    Eric Hess, Back Alley Frosty, 2024, digital print, 14 x 14″. At Atlantic Works Gallery.


  • Boston Sculptors Gallery

    486 Harrison Ave.
    Boston, MA
    (617) 482-7781
    bostonsculptors@gmail.com
    bostonsculptors.com
    W–Su 11–5

    Through November 3: Chris Abrams, IYKYK & Julia Shepley, Transmissible. First Friday November 1, 5–8:30 p.m. November 7–December 8: Murray Dewart, Numinous & Sally Fine, Sea Dreams. Artists’ reception: Saturday, November 16, 2–5 p.m. First Friday December 6, 5–8:30 p.m. Opening December 12: Cori Champagne, Water Mgmt & Christina Zwart, La Pucelle. Artists’ reception: Friday, December 13, 5–8:30 p.m. The gallery will be closed December 23, 2024 to January 1, 2025.


  • Brickbottom Gallery

    1 Fitchburg St., Somerville, MA
    (617) 766-3410
    gallery@brickbottom.org
    brickbottom.org

    November 21–December 22: Thursday through Saturday 12–5 p.m. 2024 Brickbottom Open Studios Directory Show includes Bakery Annex Gallery and Triangle Coffee Gallery. Featuring one piece by each artist participating in Brickbottom Open Studios which are happening November 23 and 24, 12–5 p.m.


  • Cahoon Museum of American Art

    4676 Falmouth Rd. (Route 28), Cotuit, MA
    (508) 428-7581
    info@cahoonmuseum.org
    cahoonmuseum.org

    Through December 22: Varujan Boghosian: Material Poetry. This exhibition presents collages and mixed-media pieces that span Boghosian’s career, including rarely seen artworks from the collection of his daughter, Heidi Boghosian. Well-known as an art professor at major American universities, Boghosian played a large role in the Provincetown art colony, influencing generations of artists and writers.

    Varujan Boghosian, Bird and Butterfly. At Cahoon Museum of American Art.

  • Cambridge Art Association

    Cambridge, MA
    (617) 876-0246
    info@cambridgeart.org
    cambridgeart.org

    Kathryn Schultz Gallery (25R Lowell Street) + CAA @ University Place (124 Mt Auburn Street), through January 17, 2025: Aura, juried by Tessa Bachi Haas (ICA/Boston). CAA @ Canal (650 E. Kendall Street), through January 8, 2025: Patterns in Nature, juried by Hadley Powell.

    Sloat Shaw, Spark of Creation, thirty-six layers of glazes, oil on canvas, 47 x 42″. At Cambridge Art Association.

  • Clark Art Institute

    225 South St., Williamstown, MA
    (413) 458-2303
    clarkart.edu
    Tu–Su 9–5

    Winter is the ideal time to visit the Clark! A renowned collection of paintings, works on paper, sculpture, and decorative arts fills the galleries. Outside, the walking trails wind through a serene wintry landscape. Borrow a free pair of snowshoes to explore the campus. Opening November 23: Abelardo Morell: In the Company of Monet and Constable. Opening December 14: Wall Power! Modern French Tapestry from the Mobilier national, Paris.

    Joan Miró, Hirondelle Amour (Swallow Love), designed 1934, woven 1979, wool. Mobilier national, Paris, France, GOB-1239, © Successió Miró/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York/ADAGP, Paris. Photo: Isabelle Bideau. At Clark Art Institute.
  • Concord Art

    37 Lexington Rd., Concord, MA
    (978) 369-2578
    info@concordart.org
    concordart.org
    Tu–Sa 10–4:30, Su 12–4

    Main Gallery, through December 19: Faculty Triennial. Members Gallery, through November 24: Deborah Baskin, Lawrence Elbroch, Victoria Elbroch, and Jean Smith. December 5–19: The Holiday Show. Reception: Thursday, December 5, 5:30 p.m.

    Lisa Daria Kennedy, Potting Bench, 2024, acrylic, 36 x 36″. At Concord Art.

  • Danforth Art Museum at Framingham State University

    14 Vernon St.
    Framingham, MA, Floor 2
    (508) 215-5110
    danforthartmuseum@framingham.edu
    danforth.framingham.edu

    The Museum has a permanent collection focusing on American art from the 19th century to the present day, rotating exhibitions of contemporary, regional artists, and a gallery focused on the artist Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller. Through January 26, 2025: Ileana Doble Hernandez: My Dear Americans, It’s Not Enough; DM Witman: Ecologies of Restoration; Suzanne Révy: A Murmur in the Trees. See website for hours and events.

    Ileana Doble Hernandez, Stickers, 2018. At Danforth Art Museum.

  • Davis Museum at Wellesley College

    106 Central St., Wellesley, MA
    (781) 283-2051
    thedavis.org
    Tu–Su 11–5

    Through December 15: Organized in association with the Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew (London) and the Mellon’s Oak Spring Garden Foundation (Virginia), Rory McEwen: A New Perspective on Nature surveys the impact of Scottish painter Rory McEwen (1932–1982). McEwen’s work is presented alongside botanical art from the eighteenth through twenty-first centuries. Free and open to the public.

    Rory McEwen (Scottish, 1932–1982), Tulip ‘Julia Farnese’ rose feather, 1976, watercolour on vellum, private collection. © Estate of Rory McEwen. At Davis Museum at Wellesley College.

  • East Boston Artists Group (EBAG)

    256 Marginal St., East Boston, MA
    eastbostonartistsgroup2@gmail.com
    eastbostonartistsgroup.com
    Sa & Su 11– 4

    November 16–17: Harboring Creativity at ICA Watershed, featuring over forty local artists exhibiting and selling their work. Included artist talks and a screening of Hoopla Productions’ documentary. Free and open to the public. A must-see event for art lovers and collectors.

    June Krinsky-Rudder, Reveal, 2024, mixed media (tissue paper; Elmer’s Glue-All; Neocolor II Aquarelle crayons; gouache; acrylic; Color-Aid Paper on handmade cold press watercolor paper), 30 x 22″ (40 x 30″ framed). At East Boston Artists Group.
  • Fitchburg Art Museum

    185 Elm St., Fitchburg, MA
    (978) 345-4207
    info@fitchburgartmuseum.org
    fitchburgartmuseum.org
    W–F 12–4, Sa & Su 11–5
    First Thursdays 12–7

    Through January 12, 2025: Bob Dilworth: When I Remembered Home features the vibrantly colored, richly layered, monumental portraits of Bob Dilworth. Through January 5, 2025: G.O.A.T. The Sports Photography of Walter Iooss. Iooss photographed professional sports with the passion and perception of a true fan, capturing iconic moments in sports history for over sixty years. Ongoing: Africa Rising: 21st-Century African Photography, including photographs by Zanele Muholi, Lalla Essaydi, and Aida Muluneh, among others.

    Bob Dilworth (American, b. 1951) Piggy-Back, 2023, acrylic paint, enamel paint, paper on canvas, 66 x 66″. Courtesy of the artist and Cade Tompkins Projects.
    At Fitchburg Art Museum.

  • Fuller Craft Museum

    455 Oak St., Brockton, MA
    fullercraft.org
    Tu–Su 10–5

    Opening December 21: Waste Not, Want Not: Craft in the Anthropocene. Ongoing: Maria Molteni: Soft Score. Ongoing: Beau McCall: Buttons On! Ongoing: Hand in Hand: Works from the Fleur S. Bresler Collection. Ongoing: Small Wonders: Beauty, Alchemy, and the Art of Enameling. Through November 3: Chris Bathgate: The Machinist Sculptor. Through November 24: Tiny Pricks Project: Desperate Times, Creative Measures. Through December 1: Michael C. Thorpe: Homeowners Insurance. Fuller Craft Museum’s wide-ranging exhibitions and outdoor sculpture showcase the finest contemporary craft in a spectacular organic modernist building and woodland setting. All are welcome, completely free of charge.

    Laura Petrovich-Cheney, Entanglement. Photo: Laura Petrovich-Cheney. At Fuller Craft Museum.

  • Griffin Museum of Photography

    67 Shore Rd., Winchester, MA
    (781) 729-1158
    griffinmuseum.org
    Tu–Su 12–4

    November 1–December 5: November at the Griffin celebrates the collection of Frazier King, champion of emerging and mid-career artists in the exhibition Collectors Eye. An artist himself, Frazier looks at the craft of photography through the eyes of these incredible artists. December brings the Griffin’s annual member’s Winter Solstice exhibition and solo exhibition from Bridget Jourgensen, the 2024 Chervinsky Prize winner.

    © John Chervinsky, Continuum, 2004. At Griffin Museum of Photography.

  • Harvard Art Museums

    32 Quincy St., Cambridge, MA
    (617) 495-9400
    harvardartmuseums.org

    Through January 5, 2025: Made in Germany? Art and Identity in a Global Nation. Discover an array of artworks that transcends borders and spotlights the complexities of modern German identity.

    Corinne Wasmuht, 50 U Heinrich-Heine-Str., 2009, oil on wood. Harvard Art Museums/Busch-Reisinger Museum, Gift of Ann and Graham Gund in honor of Martha Tedeschi, 2016.387. © Corinne Wasmuht. At Harvard Art Museums.

  • Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Art Gallery

    College of the Holy Cross
    Prior Performing Arts Center
    1 College St., Worcester, MA
    (508) 793-3356
    holycross.edu/cantorartgallery
    M by appointment, T & W 10–5, Th 10–6, F 10–5, Sa 12–5

    Through December 20: Blue Profundity: Contemporary Artists Revisit a Color. This exhibition features contemporary artists who incorporate blue in their work to highlight the symbolic and historic meanings of the color. Includes work by Adam Chau, Ifé Franklin, Michelle Samour, Heather Evans Smith, and Andrea Pettway Williams.

    Michelle Samour, Blue, 2019, handmade paper pulp drawing, specimen pins, 10′ x 20′ x 5″ (installed). At Iris and B. Gerald Cantor Art Gallery.

  • Jane Deering Gallery

    19 Pleasant St., Gloucester, MA
    (917) 902-4359
    info@janedeeringgallery.com
    janedeeringgallery.com
    F & Sa 1–5, Su 1–4 & by appointment

    Jane Deering Gallery presents Two Photographers | Two Solos: November 9–December 8: Paul Cary Goldberg’s street images from the 1970s alongside his contemporary farm portraits, and Anthony Ohman’s black and white series exploring the relationships of images in sequence. December 14 & 15: Paige Farrell, Art in Clay: Lighten up, It’s Christmas!

    Paul Cary Goldberg, Untitled, Farm, 2017–24, photogravure print, 6.75 x 10″. At Jane Deering Gallery.
    Antony Ohman, A Bird’s Eye, 2022, archival pigment print. 6 x 9″. At Jane Deering Gallery.

  • Kingston Gallery

    450 Harrison Ave., No. 43, Boston, MA
    (617) 423-4113
    info@kingstongallery.com
    W–Su 12–5 or by appointment

    Through December 1, Main and Center Gallery: Rhonda Smith, Undiscovered Country. Through December 1, Project Space Gallery: Wendy Seller, Hybridized Worlds. Opening reception: Friday, November 1, 5–8 p.m. December 4–29, Main and Center Gallery: Iwalani Kaluhiokalani, Show Title: Mer Sea. December 4–29, Project Space Gallery: Amy Kaczur, Messages from the Marsh—parts 4–6. Opening reception: Friday, December 6, 5–8 p.m.

    Rhonda Smith, Two Geologies, 2024, clay, found materials, metal, papier mache, wire, wood, 60 x 36 x 60″. At Kingston Gallery.
    On-Kyeong Seong, Still life with Monsters 1, 2023, mixed media and stitching on canvas, 34 x4 8″.
    At Kingston Gallery.
    Wendy Seller, 2024, digital collage, archival pigment print, 30 x 30″. At Kingston Gallery.
    Amy Kaczur, Messages from the Marsh—parts 4-6, 2024, video still, 3 minutes. At Kingston Gallery.

  • Krakow Witkin Gallery

    10 Newbury St., Boston, MA
    (617) 262-4490
    Info@krakowwitkingallery.com
    krakowwitkingallery.com
    Tu–Sa 10–5:30

    Through December 7: Jo Sandman: Folded Fabric. Saturday, November 9, 2 p.m.: Gallery talk with Jennifer M. Swope (David and Roberta Logie Curator of Textiles, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston) and Katherine French (curator, Sandman Legacy Project, and Director Emerita, Danforth Museum of Art). Reception to follow. Through December 7: Aiko Miyawaki: Work; and Robert Gober: One Wall, One Work. Saturday, November 30, 10 a.m.: Annual AIDS benefit (online only).

    Jo Sandman, Untitled [#IV], 1974, folded Linen, approximately 54 x 54″ (137.2 x 137.2 cm). At Krakow Witkin Gallery.


  • Milton Academy: Nesto Gallery, Art & Media Center

    Arts Commons Gallery,
    Kellner Performing Arts Center
    170 Centre St., Milton, MA
    (617) 898-1798
    milton.edu/arts/nesto-gallery
    M–F 9–4

    November 7–December 19: Archiometries. Artist: Santiago Hernandez. Opening reception: Thursday, November 7, 5:30–7 p.m. Archiometries is an exhibition of dynamic and colorful large-scale paintings that explore the connections (intersections?) between geometric abstraction, architecture, and graphic design.

    Santiago Hernandez, BIG/Lego, 2023, acrylic and oil on canvas, 60 x 48″. At Nesto Gallery.

  • MIT List Visual Arts Center

    20 Ames St., Cambridge, MA
    (617) 253-4680
    listinfo@mit.edu
    listart.mit.edu
    Tu, F, Sa, Su 12–6; W & Th 12–7

    Through January 12, 2025: Steina: Playback. The List Center galleries and programs are always free and open to the public. Visit listart.mit.edu for programming and exhibition updates along with their most up-to-date visitor information.

    Steina, Geomania (still), 1987, two-channel video matrix installation, color, sound, 15 min. Courtesy the artist and Berg Contemporary. At MIT List Visual Arts Center.

  • Montserrat College of Art Gallery

    Montserrat College of Art
    23 Essex St., Beverly, MA
    (978) 921-4242
    galleries@montserrat.edu
    M–F 10–5, Sa 12–5

    Montserrat Gallery, through November 23: Throughline, The Fiber Art of Mary Balzer Buskirk. Carol Schlosberg Alumni Gallery, through November 16: I’ll Be Your Mirror (Part I); Annie Lee-Daly & Shannon Herrick.

    Mary Balzer Buskirk, New Beginning (detail), 1975, wool and mixed fibers, 33 x 35″. Courtesy of Martha Buskirk. At Montserrat College of Art Gallery.

  • Nantucket Historical Association—Whaling Museum

    13 Broad St., Nantucket, MA
    (508) 228-1894
    marketing@nha.org
    Daily 10–5

    Through December 31: Tony Sarg: Genius at Play is the first comprehensive exhibition exploring the life, art, and adventures of Tony Sarg (1880–1942). Known as the father of modern puppetry in North America and the originator of the iconic Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade balloons, Sarg was an accomplished illustrator, animator, designer, and nimble entrepreneur who summered on, and took inspiration from, Nantucket for nearly twenty years. Organized and in partnership with the Normal Rockwell Museum. Made possible in part by funding by the National Endowment for the Arts.

    Tony Sarg with illustrations from Tony Sarg’s Book for Children, 1924, NHA Collection, PH-8-23 and 1983.57.59. At Nantucket Historical Society.
  • New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill 

    11 French Dr., Boylston, MA 
    (508) 869-6111 
    nebg.org 
    Daily 10–5

    November 23, 2024–January 5, 2025, evenings: Experience Night Lights: Color Cascade, a breathtaking light display celebrating the magic and beauty of the winter season. Wander through formal gardens and conservatories illuminated by more than a quarter million artfully arranged lights. With displays showcasing a creative new theme each year, this dazzling, one-of-a-kind spectacle is unmatched in the region. Festive activities such as outdoor skating, s’mores roasting, and holiday shopping promise an unforgettable experience for visitors of all ages.

    Night Lights: Color Cascade at New England Botanic Garden at Tower Hill.

  • Norman Rockwell Museum

    9 Glendale Rd./Rte. 183, Stockbridge, MA
    (413) 298-4100
    nrm.org
    Open daily, except Wednesday, 10–5

    Home of American Illustration; featuring new exhibitions. Opening November 9: Anita Kunz. November 23, 2024–January 4, 2026: Illustrators of Light: Rockwell, Wyeth, and Parrish from the Mazda Edison Collection. Opening November 9: Norman Rockwell: Home for the Holidays. Guided tours of Rockwell’s Studio and galleries by reservation. Museum Store (and online store). Save time with online tickets. More at NRM.org.

    Anita Kunz, (L) Elizabeth Freeman, 2024. Berkshire Original Sisters series. Collection of Norman Rockwell Museum. (R) Greta Thunberg, 2020. Illustration for Original Sisters: Portraits of Tenacity and Courage by Anita Kunz (New York: Pantheon) Acrylic on board. Collection of the artist. © Anita Kunz. All rights reserved. At Norman Rockwell Museum.

  • Paradise City Arts Festival

    Royal Plaza Trade Center
    181 Boston Post Road West (Rt. 20 W)
    Marlborough, MA
    (800) 511-9725
    paradisecityarts.com
    November 22–24

    Paradise City Arts hosts New England’s premier and most celebrated shows of contemporary fine and decorative arts. The Marlborough event draws thousands of attendees of art buyers, designers, and enthusiasts seeking to connect with 175 exceptional artists and makers from across the country. In Metrowest Boston (with free parking), enjoy the special exhibition Styling the Seasons, music in the air, and two cafés.

    Christine MacKellar, jewelry. At Paradise City Arts.

  • ShowUp

    524B Harrison Ave., Boston, MA
    contact@showupinc.org
    showupinc.org
    Th–Sa 12–5, Su 11–4 & by appointment

    December 6, 2024–February 16, 2025: AEROSOL: Boston’s Graffiti DNA, its Origin and Evolution. Launched as a five-part series in Art New England magazine will culminate in an exhibition at ShowUp Gallery in Boston, MA. Local artists, now grown, reflect on how graffiti introduced them to a medium that would mark their paths. While graffiti is temporary, its impact is permanent. Opening reception: Friday, December 6, 5–8 p.m.


  • SMFA Art Sale

    SMFA at Tufts University
    230 The Fenway, Boston, MA
    smfa.tufts.edu/artsale
    Friday, December 6, 10–5; Saturday, December 7, 10–8; Sunday, December 8, 10–5

    Celebrating its 46th anniversary, the SMFA Art Sale has been the leading contemporary art sale in New England since its creation in 1978; raising critical funds to support the financial aid needs of current students. Offering works across all mediums and price points, the sale showcases a diverse selection of talented students, alumni, faculty, and friends of SMFA.

    Photo: Caitlin Cunningham. SMFA Art Sale at Tufts University.
  • SONO Arts at The Norwood Space Center

    83 Morse St., Bldg. 6, Norwood, MA
    norwoodspacecenter.com/sono-arts/
    sonorwoodarts@gmail.com
    Saturday & Sunday, November 23 & 24, 11–4

    The Norwood Space Center will celebrate the holidays with vendors, food trucks, and Salvage Angel’s Holiday Stroll. SONO Arts—the resident artists—will open their studios in Building 6 and guest artists from Norwood and surrounding communities will join them for an art exhibition. Free and open to the public. To learn more, visit Norwoodspacecenter.com/events.

    Haley Johnson, Windswept and Hungry, 2024, oil on canvas, 40 × 60″. At SONO Arts at The Norwood Space Center.

  • Springfield Museums

    21 Edwards St., Springfield, MA
    springfieldmuseums.org
    Tu–Sa 10–5, Su 11–5

    Ongoing: Look Again: Portraits of Daring Women by Julie Lapping Rivera; Designing Downtown; Tiffany’s Gardens in Glass; Gilded Echoes: The Tiffany Influence in Josh Simpson’s Glasswork.

    Josh Simpson (American, born 1949), Vase with Silver Swirl, 1978, Michele and Donald D’Amour Museum of Fine Arts, Gift of Katie and Jonathan Oakleaf.
    At Springfield Museums.

  • The Guild of Boston Artists

    162 Newbury St., Boston, MA
    (617) 536-7660
    bostonguild@gmail.com
    guildofbostonartists.org
    Tu–Sa 10:30–5:30

    Through November 30: Stapleton Kearns—We Are Still In Eden, a solo exhibition of oil paintings that reveal the landscape artist’s deep sensitivity to the beauty and magnificence found in pure rural nature as each canvas implores us to respond to a visual poetry of place. Artist demonstration: Saturday, November 16, 1 p.m. Opening December 7: Winter Holiday and Small Works Displays.

    Stapleton Kearns, A Pecham VT Farm in Fall, oil on panel, 26 x 29″. At The Guild of Boston Artists.

  • The Umbrella Arts Center

    40 Stow St., Concord, MA
    (978) 371-0820
    info@theumbrellaarts.org
    theumbrellaarts.org/gallery
    M–Su 10–9

    Through December 16, in the Allie Kussin Gallery: The Alchemy of a Life: Selected Works by Thorpe Feidt. December 6–20, in the Wedge Gallery: Off-the-Wall, an exhibition of small works by Umbrella Studio Artists. Friday through Sunday, December 6–8: Umbrella Winter Market, annual show and sale of artist, artisan, and hand-crafted work.


  • Williams College Museum of Art

    15 Lawrence Hall Dr., Williamstown, MA
    (413) 597-2429
    wcma@williams.edu
    artmuseum.williams.edu
    Tu–Su 10–5

    Through December 22: Teddy Sandoval and the Butch Gardens School of Art is the first museum retrospective dedicated to Teddy Sandoval (1949–1995), a central figure in Los Angeles’s queer and Chicanx artistic circles who was an active participant in avant-garde movements. Through December 22: Pallavi Sen: Colour Theory is an immersive installation of new work by interdisciplinary artist and Williams College assistant professor of art Pallavi Sen.

    Teddy Sandoval installation image. Bradley Wakoff/WCMA. At Williams College Museum of Art.

  • Worcester Art Museum

    55 Salisbury St., Worcester, MA
    (508) 799-4406
    worcesterart.org
    W–Su 10–4

    Through January 20, 2025: Im/Perfect Modernisms: Asian Art and Identity Since 1945. Challenge your preconceptions of modern art through thought-provoking and at times subversive artworks created across postwar Asia. November 23, 2024–March 9, 2025: Twentieth-Century Nudes from Tate. Explore how the nude was used by artists in the 20th century to explore new ideas about age, race, gender, and sexuality, with works by Pablo Picasso, Alice Neel, Barkley L. Hendricks, Henri Matisse, and many more.

    Masami Teraoka, 31 Flavors Invading Japan/Today’s Special, 1981, Harriet B. Bancroft Fund. Photo courtesy of the artist and Catharine Clark Gallery. At Worcester Art Museum.

RHODE ISLAND

  • Bannister Art Gallery at Rhode Island College

    600 Mt. Pleasant Ave., Providence, RI
    (401) 456-9765
    bannistergallery@ric.edu
    ric.edu/bannister
    M–F 12–8 or by appointment

    November 7–December 6: Richard Whitten: Objects of Wonder. Richard Whitten creates paintings which transport the viewer through the surface of the painting into a world of imagined architectural spaces. There, the viewer finds similarly imagined machines and is invited to bring the worlds inside the paintings to life—to propel the machine into motion—through sight and thought alone.


  • Chazan Gallery at Wheeler

    228 Angell St., Providence, RI  
    (401) 528-2227
    info@chazangallery.org
    chazangallery.org
    M–F 3–6, Sa 10–4

    Through November 6: Silver Linings at NE 48th Ave, Kate Copeland and Ayumi Ishii. November 21–December 17: Water Ways, Mo Kelman. Reception: Thursday, November 21, 5–8 p.m.


  • Newport Mansions

    Rosecliff, 548 Bellevue Ave., Newport, RI
    (401) 847-1000
    Newportmansions.org
    Daily 10–3

    Through January 12, 2025: Wild Imagination: Art and Animals in the Gilded Age. During the Gilded Age (1865–1914), Americans’ relationship with animals transformed in lasting ways. Wild Imagination explores how this exciting, tumultuous era shaped our modern attitudes towards animals, from pampered pups to wondrous sea creatures. A broad range of artworks, photographs, scientific specimens, and other objects reflect vital period developments including the dawn of the animal rights movement, the surge in pet keeping, the popularization of natural history pursuits like birdwatching, and the golden era of zoos and circuses. They also reveal the stories and experiences of individual creatures who continue to capture our imagination.

    Mariette Leslie Cotton, Portrait of Hippodale at Six Years Old, c. 1910. The Preservation Society of Newport County. Gift of Ms. Christina C. Anderson. At Newport Mansions.

  • RISD Museum

    20 North Main St., Providence, RI
    (401) 454-6500
    risdmuseum.org
    Tu, W, F, Sa, Su 10–5, Th 12–8

    Opening November 16: The Art of French Wallpaper Design and The Road Less Traveled: Edo’s Nakasendo. Opening December 7: From Pineapple to Pañuelo: Philippine Textiles. On view: Listen! Selections made by the RISD Art Circle and Brighten Up! Contemporary Enamels.

    View of Venice Wallpaper, ca. 1840. Mary B. Jackson Fund. At RISD Museum.

Vermont

  • Brattleboro Museum & Art Center

    10 Vernon Street
    Brattleboro VT 05301
    802-257-0124
    office@brattleboromuseum.org
    www.brattleboromuseum.org
    W–Su 10-4

    Ongoing: Desire Lines featuring the artwork of Alex Callender, Nandini Chirimar, Tara Geer, Maggie Nowinski, Dana Piazza, James Siena; Susan Mikula: Island; Adrienne Elise Tarver: Roots, Water, Air; The Noise of Us, featuring the artwork of Felipe Baeza, Ori Gersht, Simonette Quamina, and Maika’i Tubbs, and Vanessa Compton: A Night at the Garden. November 7–11: The 17th Annual LEGO Contest & Exhibit. Details at brattleboromuseum.org. Admission is pay-as-you-wish.

    Susan Mikula, ISLAND #2, 2024, archival pigment print on Hahnemuhle fine art museum etching paper, mounted on aluminum, 27 x 26.5″. At Brattleboro Museum & Art Center.

  • Burlington City Arts

    135 Church St., Burlington, VT
    burlingtoncityarts.org
    (802) 865-7166
    W–F 12–5, Sa 12–8

    A contemporary art gallery with up to three floors of exhibition space, hosting new exhibitions every fall, winter/spring, and summer, on Burlington’s iconic Church Street Marketplace. Through February 1, 2025: Passages: Identity, Memory, and Transformation, a group of contemporary artists who embrace themes of journey and transformation in their art. Through January 18, 2025: Between the Covers: Works by Jane Kent, artist books, broadsheets, and working drawings created by the artist in collaboration with eight authors over the past 25 years. Free and open to the public.

    Michelle Im, Assorted Vessels, 2024, earthenware, dimensions variable. At Burlington City Arts.

  • Hall Art Foundation

    544 VT Route 106, Reading, VT
    vermont@hallartfoundation.org
    hallartfoundation.org
    Through December 1: weekends, 10 docent-led tours; 11–4 self-guided tours.

    The Hall Art Foundation is a museum of contemporary art with a sculpture park and café. Exhibitions are held seasonally, from May through November. On view this year: Barbara Kruger; Ed Ruscha; Sherrie Levine; Doomscrolling by Zorawar Sidhu and Rob Swainston and Icarus Rising by Robert Longo. Advance reservations recommended, yet not required. General admission: $15 adults; $5 children 12 and under.

    Barbara Kruger, Untitled (I know what you’re thinking), 1996, photographic silkscreen on vinyl, 121 x 121″ (307.5 x 307.5 cm), © the artist. At Hall Art Foundation.

  • Mad River Valley Arts

    5031 Main St., #2 Village Square
    Waitsfield, VT
    (802) 224-6878
    info@madrivervalleyarts.org
    Tu–Sa 1–5

    November 7–December 19: Elemental, a group show about water and its soulful impact on our daily lives. Artists in Elemental share the ethereal beauty of water and ask us to reflect upon our deep connection to this element of nature. Unusual materials and whimsical forms in their varying creative practices force the viewer to contemplate colors, textures, and emotions of imaginal landscapes, and to evoke the connection between them through the balance of harmony and disharmony, structure and chaos and the dance between light and shadow.

    Dianne Athey, Coke to Seaglass, 2024, oil on wood, 16 x 32 x 1″. At Mad River Arts.

  • Mitchell-Giddings Fine Arts

    181–183 Main St., Brattleboro, VT
    (802) 251-8290
    info@mitchellgiddingsfinearts.com
    mitchellgiddingsfinearts.com
    Th–Sa 11–5, Su 12–5

    Ongoing: Decade: 2014–2024, commemorating Mitchell • Giddings’ 10th anniversary with an exploration of printmaking by Matt Brown, Liz Chalfin, Elaine de Kooning, Eric Fischl, Stephen Hannock, Emily Mason, Jules Olitski, James Stroud, Dan Welden, and others. Opening a fine art gallery in 2014 provided owners Petria Mitchell and Jim Giddings an ideal opportunity to share conversation among artists, collectors and lovers of the visible creative act.

    Emily Mason, Untitled (TAM 70), 1985, litho monotype on paper, 30 x 22″. At Mitchell • Giddings Fine Arts.

  • Vermont Artisan Designs

    106 Main St., Brattleboro, VT
    (802) 246-7245 | (802) 257-7044
    vtart.com
    M–Sa 10–5, Su 12–5

    Fine art & contemporary American craft. November 1–December 5: Oil paintings of New England by Jacqueline Jones, Don Demers and Beth Bathe. Opening reception: Friday, November 1. Peter Skolnick on piano. December 6–January 2: Oil paintings by Gary Shepard; paintings of farm animals and others by Caryn King. Opening reception: Friday, December 6. Peter Skolnick on piano.

    Gary Shepard, Morning Run, oil on canvas. At Vermont Artisan Designs.

NEW HAMPSHIRE

  • 3S Artspace

    319 Vaughan St., Portsmouth, NH
    (603) 766-3330
    info@3sarts.org
    3sarts.org
    W–Sa 11–6, Su 12–5

    Opening November 22: Two exhibits, Noticing Light and Kinship Compositions, works by Christina Watka and Margaret Jacobs, respectively. Watka creates joyful spaces that reflect the interplay between light, fullness, movement, and stillness. Juxtaposed with Watka’s delicate suspended sculptures, Jacobs uses steel for her sculpture and powder coated brass in her jewelry, developing organic textures and surfaces. Free and open to the public.

    Margaret Jacobs, Subtle and Strong, 2021, steel, 42″ diameter. At 3S Artspace.

  • AVA Gallery and Art Center

    11 Bank Street, Lebanon, NH
    (603) 448-3117
    exhibitions@avagallery.org
    avagallery.org
    Tu–Sa 11–5

    November 29–December 26: AVA Member’s Holiday Exhibition and Sale. AVA’s annual holiday exhibition features the work of member artists from Vermont and New Hampshire. Works in a variety of media will be on display and available for sale at a wide range of prices. Shopping at AVA ensures finding special gifts of lasting value while supporting local artists and AVA’s commitment to nurturing the artistic spirit. Open house: Saturday, December 7, 11–4 p.m.; reception 5–7 p.m.

    2023 AVA Member’s Holiday Exhibition. Photo: Travis Paige. At AVA Gallery and Art Center.

  • Currier Museum of Art

    150 Ash St., Manchester, NH
    (603) 669-6144
    visitor@currier.org
    currier.org
    W–Su 10–5

    Ongoing: Jean-Michel Basquiat and Ouattara Watts: A Distant Conversation brings together six artworks by American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat (1960–1988), one of the most celebrated and influential artists of his generation, and seven large canvases by New York-based Ivorian painter Ouattara Watts (b. 1958). Ongoing: Dan Dailey: Impressions of the Human Spirit. Ongoing: Olga de Amaral: Everything is Construction and Color.

    Photographer unknown, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Ouattara Watts, 1988, c-print, from Ouattara Watts’ personal archive. At Currier Museum of Art.
    Ouattara Watts, Intercessor #0, 1989, mixed media on canvas. © Ouattara Watts. Courtesy the artist and Karma. At Currier Museum of Art.

  • Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth

    6 East Wheelock St., Hanover, NH
    hood.museum@dartmouth.edu
    hoodmuseum.dartmouth.edu
    W 11–5, Th–F 11–8, Sa & Su 10–5
    Free and open to all

    Opening November 16: In East Asian art, non-human subjects have long been represented with agency, coexisting alongside their human counterparts. Experience an inclusive and collaborative relationship in Attitude of Coexistence: Non-Humans in East Asian Art. Opening January 18: Cara Romero: Panûpünüwügai (Living Light) presents a thematic examination of Romero’s complex and layered images, which celebrate the multiplicity, beauty, and resilience of Native American and Indigenous experiences. This is Romero’s first major solo exhibition.

    Choe U-Ram, Gold Cakra Lamp (edition 5/20 with 2AP), 2013, metallic material, machinery, electronic device (CPU board, motor, LED). Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Purchased through the Evelyn A. and William B. Jaffe 2015 Fund; 2024.17.1. © Choe U-Ram. At Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth.
    Cara Romero, 3 Sisters, 2022, archival pigment print. Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth: Purchased through the Acquisition and Preservation of Native American Art Fund; 2022.47.2. © Cara Romero. At Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth.

  • The Lakes Gallery at Chi-Lin since 1981

    135 Eastman Rd., Laconia, NH
    (603) 556-9384
    suzanne@thelakesgallery.com
    thelakesgallery.com
    Th–Sa 11–5, Su 1–5 and by appointment

    Contemporary fine New England art and photography in a 1780 farmhouse. Through November 11: A Place for the Sacred: Four Artists Reflect Upon A New & Difficult World. Sunday, November 3, 4 p.m.: Closing Arguments & Poetry Reading. Individual and group fall and winter workshops in italic calligraphy, nature cards/journals and raised and tooled gold leaf.

    Nature Cards workshop at lakes gallery at chi-lin.


  • The Putnam Gallery at Dublin School

    18 Lehmann Way, Dublin, NH
    (603) 563-8584
    dublinschool.org
    Daily 10-4

    Through December 18: A Sculptor’s Watercolors. Sculptor Wendy Klemperer shows her watercolors and drawings, offering a rare glimpse of an artist’s work across mediums. She will display a sculpture recently purchased for the Dublin School’s sculpture park alongside her intimate, fresh and bold watercolor studies. Reception: Friday, December 6, 6-8 p.m.

    Wendy Klemperer, Seaver Dark Reflection, 2024, watercolor. Photo: Wendy Klemperer. At Putnam Gallery at Dublin School.

  • WREN Gallery

    2011 Main St., Bethlehem, NH
    (603) 869-9736
    hello@wrenworks.org
    M–Sa 10–5, Su 11–4

    November 8–December 29: WRENchanted Holidays: WREN’s annual member exhibition features work in a variety of styles and mediums from WREN’s diverse member population. Shop for holiday gifts from local and regional artists and artisans.

    Mimi Wiggin, Knee Deep in Snow, oil on board, 8 x10″. At WREN Gallery.