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Cambridge, Boston, and Beyond Harvard2 Cambridge, Boston, and beyond 12B Extracurriculars Events on and off campus through July and August 12D New England Contemporary takes at the Boston Athenaeum 12L A Day in Lincoln A stylish, rural retreat from urban hubbub 12F Reflections on a River Paddling the Merrimack in Lowell and Lawrence 12O The Eating Is Easy Restaurants nestled in the Massachusetts countryside HARVARD MAGAZINE/ NELL PORTER BROWN Harvard Magazine 12a Reprinted from Harvard Magazine. For more information, contact Harvard Magazine, Inc. at 617-495-5746 HARVARD SQUARED Ceramics Program www.ofa.fas.harvard.edu Extracurriculars The “(It’s) All About the Atmosphere Invitational Exhibition,” curated by in- Events on and off campus during July and August structor Crystal Ribich, features a range of objects and celebrates a long tradition of SEASONAL meats, produce, breads and pastries, ceramicists gathering to fire their works The Farmers’ Market at Harvard herbs, pasta, chocolates, and cheeses— together. (June 17-August 19) www.dining.harvard.edu/food-literacy- along with guest chefs and cooking dem- project/farmers-market-harvard onstrations. Science Center Plaza. Swingin’ on the Charles Established in 2005, the market offers fish, (Tuesdays, through November 21) www.swinginonthecharles.blogspot.com Celebrate the tenth anniversary of this From left: Frank Stella’s Star of Persia II (1967), at the Addison Gallery of American Art; from “(It’s) All About the Atmosphere Invitational Exhibition,” Harvard Ceramics lively evening event. Lessons for newbies Program; a Japanese N o- theater costume (1800-1850), at RISD start at 7 P.M.; dancers of any age and abil- FRANKFROM © 2017 LEFT: STELLA / ARTISTS RIGHTS SOCIETY (ARS), NEW YORK/COURTESY OF THE ADDISON GALLERY OF AMERICAN ART; COURTESY OF THE HARVARD CERAMICS PROGRAM/HARVARD OFFICE OF THE ARTS; COURTESY OF RISD One might be tempted to describe Harvard alumnus Dr. John Truman using the titles he’s held or the places he’s worked. And Pursue certainly, there’s much to say about an accomplished pediatric hematologist- oncologist who held appointments at some your of the nation’s most respected institutions before moving to Edgewood Retirement Community. But listen closely and you’ll passion also hear the faint skirl of the bagpipes drifting through the woods as this man here. of science skillfully and lovingly pursues another passion — bringing his Scottish heritage to life. HOW WILL YOU EXPRESS YOURSELF? Discover a rich, multidimensional lifestyle at Edgewood. To learn more about Life on the Life on the Edge. Edge, call 978-482-7784. 575 Osgood Street | North Andover, MA 01845 978-482-7784 | EdgewoodRC.com 12B July - August 2017 Reprinted from Harvard Magazine. For more information, contact Harvard Magazine, Inc. at 617-495-5746 1730 Massachusetts Ave Cambridge, MA 02138 www.gailroberts.com 617 245-4044 CAMBRIDGE, MA CAMBRIDGE, MA $ 2,500,000 Price Upon Request SOMERVILLE, MA CAMBRIDGE, MA $985,000 $595,000 Building Community One Home at a Time Proud supporters of: US Fund for UNICEF, The Mt. Auburn Hospital, Huntington Theatre Company, The Guidance Center and Cambridge Community Foundation 170714_Coldwell-GailRoberts.indd 1 5/24/17 10:03 AM HARVARD SQUARED ity can swing ’til 11 P.M. Community Boating NATURE AND SCIENCE Harvard Museum of Natural History Inc., Boston’s Esplanade. (August 19) Tower Hill Botanic Garden www.hmnh.harvard.edu www.towerhillbg.org World in a Drop: Photographic Explo- MUSIC Live music and tattoo demonstrations, food rations of Microbial Life features gran- Harvard Summer School Chorus trucks, artisans, drawing activities, and gar- ular and instructive images by photogra- www.boxoffice.harvard.edu den tours abound at the inaugural Botanical pher, writer, and biologist Scott Chimileski, The ensemble performs Mozart’s Requiem. Tattoo Weekend. (July 8-9) a postdoctoral fellow at Harvard Medical Sanders Theatre. (July 28) School. (Opens August 26) Arnold Arboretum FILM www.arboretum.harvard.edu Harvard Art Museums Harvard Film Archive Weekend walking tours with, or without, www.harvardartmuseums.org www.hcl.harvard.edu/hfa themes, like From Seed to Tree (August 5), The Philosophy Chamber: Art and Sci- In response to uncertain political times, along with family-focused events, such as ence in the Teaching Cabinet, 1766- Summer Cinema of Resistance aims to Let’s Get Buggy! Exploration of Insect 1820. Artifacts, artworks, and specimens spark discussion with guest speakers and Pollinators. (July 8). that have played a crucial role in research and screenings that include Luis Valdez’s Zoot teaching at Harvard, and beyond. (See “The Suit, Jean Renoir’s Life Is Ours, and Spike Lee’s EXHIBITIONS & EVENTS Lost Museum,” May-June 2016, page 42.) Do the Right Thing. (Through August 6) Cooper Gallery of African and African American Art Addison Gallery of American Art Saturday Matinee offers a wonderful set www.coopergalleryhc.org www.andover.edu of family-friendly films, like Hayao Miyaza- Anchored by photographer Dawoud Bey’s Frank Stella Prints: From the Collections ki’s Howl’s Moving Castle, the environmental series “Harlem, USA” (1975-1979) and of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family tragicomedy WALL-E, and The Little Fugi- “Harlem, Redux” ( 2015-2016), Harlem: Foundation. The retrospective offers more tive—the classic 1953 American tale of a Found Ways also includes mixed media and than a hundred works by the meticulous seven-year-old Brooklyn boy who reacts to installation art that explore one of New abstract artist. (Through July 30) a prank played by his brother by fleeing to York City’s most dynamic and historically Coney Island. (Through August 19) influential neighborhoods. (Through July 15) RISD Museum www.risdmuseum.org Designing Traditions Biennial STAFF PICK: Capturing New England V: Student Explorations in the Asian Textile Collection reflects From skyscrapers to stormy seas, “New England on Paper,” at both new pieces by emerging art- the Boston Athenaeum, offers 56 contemporary works. They reflect ists and traditional woven, knit- “responses to the region’s built, natural, and cultural environment,” ted, printed, and other handmade says Catharina Slautterback, curator of the library’s 100,000 prints objects. (Opens August 11) and photographs. Using the Japanese hanga technique, New Hamp- shire wood-block artist Matt Brown ’81 created Moon Over Mt. Des- New Britain Museum of ert Island (2010, at right). Three impressions of the image hang as a American Art triptych because Slautterback loves how, in “relating to one another, www.nbmaa.org they show the passage of time.” All of the works were bought with Cubism and abstract expression- help from a print fund for regional artists that honors Francis Hovey ism collide with “sun-drenched, Boston Athenaeum Howe ’52, Ed.M. ’73. (The art collector laid back, fetishistic Southern Cal- www.bostonathenaum.org and Athenaeum member was also an ifornia” car, surfer, and drug cul- Through September 3 early-childhood educator instrumental in tures in the alluring exhibit Cali- forming Harvard’s first fornia Dreaming: Ed Moses, daycare centers.) Slaut- Billy Al Bengston, & Ed Ruscha. terback clearly seeks a (June 23-October 15) diversity of styles. Eric Goldberg’s poignant etching Deep in the Val- Peabody Essex Museum ley (2006), pairs expansive Connecticut www.pem.org River valley farmlands with an intimate Nearly 200 works, from paintings and mod- view of a woman reading a letter. Realist els to furniture and textiles, explore Ocean painter Kate Sullivan used pastel and wa- Liners: Glamour, Speed, Style. Co-curat- tercolor in End of the Line, Cleveland Circle ed with London’s Victoria and Albert Mu- (2012, at left). “It all results in a loud cheer- seum. (Through October 9) fulness,” the artist wrote in the wall label, “and a distinctive sense of place.” vN.P.B. Events listings are also accessible at www. COURTESY OF THE BOSTON ATHENAEUM (2) harvardmagazine.com. 12d July - August 2017 Reprinted from Harvard Magazine. For more information, contact Harvard Magazine, Inc. at 617-495-5746 IGNITE SOMETHING ONLY THE PERFECT CUT CAN UNLEASH A DIAMOND’S BRILLIANCE. HEARTS ON FIRE STORES, AUTHORIZED RETAILERS, HEARTSONFIRE.COM 7675-LBG.indd 1 5/1/17 12:08 PM 170715_LuxBondGreen.indd 1 5/24/17 10:34 AM EXPLORATIONS Reflections on a River Paddling the Merrimack in Lowell and Lawrence by nell porter Brown From left: Lone paddlers take in the sunset; the UMass Lowell Kayak Center (above) rents boats and runs classes and trips; kayakers explore Stony Brook and a historic canal; a bird’s-eye MAGAZINE/NPB HARVARD view of an urban stretch of the Merrimack Valley hubs of Manchester and Nashua, then swings east into Massachu- setts through Lowell, Lawrence, COURTESY UMASS CENTER LOWELL KAYAK and Haverhill to Newburyport n May, 15 UMass Lowell seniors, gradu- blue heron perches on telephone wires. Bird and the Atlantic Ocean. (To the north, the ation day in sight, push off from the city’s songs fill the air. Everyone stops to listen. Contoocook River Canoe Company of- Bellegarde Boathouse for an afternoon of “This is a great time to be here,” says trip fers scenic river outings from the town of I kayaking on the Merrimack River. Here leader Kevin Soleil, assistant director of Boscawen, New Hampshire.) the waterway, first harnessed to power tex- outdoor and bicycle programs at the uni- Two urban stretches in Massachusetts tile mills in the 1800s, is about a thousand versity’s recreation department. “The wa- hold a different sort of fascination: in Low- feet wide and smooth, thanks to the Paw- ter is really high because of all the rain, and ell, it’s the six miles from the boathouse to tucket Dam. Paddling upstream, toward the birds are migrating through. It’s also a Tyngsborough; in Lawrence, it’s a paddle New Hampshire, the group soon turns off great time to find a piece of trash and pick that begins near the Great Stone Dam.
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