Emerson Contemporary Awarded Grant for Gallery Improvements
“It is exciting to see the space be the best it can be,” Emerson Contemporary Director Leonie Bradbury said.
“It is exciting to see the space be the best it can be,” Emerson Contemporary Director Leonie Bradbury said.
Boston Globe art critic Cate McQuaid recently gave a great review to artist and filmmaker Kerry Tribe’s ‘Onomatopoeia’ multimedia exhibition exploring memory, language, communication, and their inherent limitations.
Tribe’s work synthesizes cinematic, journalistic, and conceptual approaches.
Emerson Contemporary, Emerson College’s platform for visual art, proudly presents Kerry Tribe: Onomatopoeiaeia, a solo exhibition by the renowned Los Angeles-based artist and filmmaker, on view in the Media Art Gallery at 25 Avery Street, from January 26 – March 27, 2022.
I: An Intimate Reflection, is on view at the Media Art Gallery through Sunday, December 12.
Emerson Contemporary, Emerson College’s platform for presenting contemporary visual art, presents a new exhibition “I: An Intimate Reflection,” on view in the Media Art Gallery at 25 Avery Street, through December 12, 2021. The presentation includes a broad range of media by Boston-based emerging artists such as photography, steel sculpture, acrylic painting, digital video, and hand-sewn mixed media installations.
In Present Joys, textural fragments are juxtaposed with symbolic and abstract imagery in video, photography, and 16mm film to explore personal and historical understandings of different native homelands
Emerson Contemporary, Emerson College’s platform for presenting contemporary visual art, presents “Present Joys,” a multimedia solo exhibition featuring visual artist and experimental filmmaker Sky Hopinka, on view in the Media Art Gallery at 25 Avery Street, from September 23 – November 7.
Emerson Contemporary, Emerson College’s platform for presenting contemporary visual art, proudly presents Threads Undone, on view at the Media Art Gallery, 25 Avery Street, Boston, through May 9, 2021.
The Globe’s Cate McQuaid reviewed Emerson Contemporary’s latest exhibition, “Georgie Friedman: Hurricane Lost,” noting “[Friedman’s] installations about nature evoke awe and human frailty.”