Thursday, March 25 at 8PM ET Alexis Boo ’22 will explore what it means for art to be “untouched” through close looking at three works that arguably lack the physical touch of the artist’s hand such the woodblock print "A Cloudy Day in Mizuki, Ibaraki Prefecture" (1946) by Kawase Wasui, and more.
Friday, March 26 at 1PM ET On the anniversary of the Selma to Montgomery March, Professor David A. Moss, author of the acclaimed book “Democracy: A Case Study,” makes history come alive with an audience-driven discussion of Martin Luther King Jr. and the movement for voting rights.
Saturday, March 27 at 11AM ET Maeve Miller ’22 will move through the museums’ collections with an eye toward games and game play. Along the way, she’ll discuss issues of form and function, mysticism, and how play comes together with the pursuit of knowledge.
Monday, March 29 at 7PM ET Enthusiasm for watercolor painting swept the United States in the years after the founding of the American Watercolor Society in New York in 1866. In this lecture, curator Kathleen A. Foster from the Philadelphia Museum of Art will discuss this early period of watercolor painting in Boston.
March 30-April 1 Join us for the 35th Cultural Rhythms presented by the Harvard Foundation for Intercultural and Race Relations! Stay tuned for the official reveal of our stellar honoree! Check out more information and be sure to register for any and all events!