In The Sea Around Us, Michele Lauriat presents large-scale, experimental drawings of real, fictional, and imagined landscapes that call attention to environmental concerns.
Bent & Borrowed is an online-only exhibition that explores the nuanced practice of appropriating artworks, images, and ideas within contemporary artistic expression.
Homa Sarabi is Gallery 263’s summer 2024 artist in residence. Sarabi’s residency will culminate in a one-week showcase.
The Morse School Art Show is a community exhibition featuring the work of nearly 300 students from Morse Elementary School in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Eat With Your Eyes is a national group exhibition juried by contemporary art scholar and educator Silvia Bottinelli.
I wake up in your bed is a group exhibition of photography in which the artists deal in desire and collaboration.
Face is a national group exhibition juried by Anthony Peyton Young. In Face, more than 20 featured artists exhibit work that challenges the tradition and explores the potential of portraiture.
Nathan Bolton presents images of the Los Angeles Rebellion, one of the United States’ four original Queer/Inclusive rugby teams, as they return for their twentieth season amid increasingly anti-LGBTQ+ rhetoric nationwide.
Re/Un Making is a group exhibition featuring artists whose practices are in flux, unresolved, and actively renegotiated in the face of significant life changes.
In The View From Mars, the featured artists explore the extraterrestrial gaze—imagined through the lens of science fiction and surveillance—and delve into the idea that technology has also become a kind of alien force observing and shaping our lives.
Fiberscapes is the first-ever solo exhibition by Massachusetts-born Maris Van Vlack
New Language: Contemporary Abstraction is a national survey of abstract art.
In “Once Through a Lens,” Jonathan Mark Jackson and Ali Newhard present work that considers how the landscape of New England has structured their shared and disparate identities.
The first-ever solo show by summer 2023 artist-in-residence Lilan Yang.
“Now Introducing Mr. Blank is a solo exhibit about the stripping of identity under capitalism—the removal of nuance from human existence. Griffin Fisher’s work forces us to ask: How do we view ourselves, as opposed to how an imperfect social order categorizes us?