All in ART

Inaugural Wagner Art Fellows Daniela Rivera & L'Merchie Frazier Prove Print is the Medium of Protest

Inaugural recipients of the Wagner Foundation Art Fellowship L’Merchie Frazier and Daniela Rivera share their experiences venturing into the print studio with Lucy Rosenburgh of Caira Art Editions. Coming from their tactile, large scale, three dimensional and often participatory practices, both artists found expansiveness in the print experience, tapping into the medium’s history as a tool for public engagement and protest.

Danielle Mckinney's Language of Interiority

“She has absorbed all of art history like a sponge. But when she wipes the sponge across our consciousness, the message is all Danielle Joy McKinney.” Misstropolis sits down with Gannit Ankori, Chief Curator of the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis to discuss the artist’s first solo North American museum show Danielle McKinney: Tell Me More. The artist will be in conversation with the curator at the gallery on November 6.

Boston is the World and the World is Boston, the 2025 Foster Prize at the ICA

This year, the Foster Prize, curated by Tessa Bachi Haas, recognizes four artists whose work addresses our current moment in deeply personal and uniquely technical ways. Through their artistic labor, Alison Croney Moses, Yorgos Efthymiadis, Damien Hoar de Galvan and Sneha Shrestha (aka IMAGINE) remind us of the power of art to bring us together, especially when the world seems to want to tear us apart.

What To Do This Weekend, or How to Tattoo Your Soul

Here it is, the last weekend of September 2025, and we haven’t seen all of the art yet. There’s always too much inspiration to soak in, too much beauty to behold and not enough time. But Misstropolis is here to guide you to the best. These don’t-miss shows will have you ending the month on a creative high note.

The Safarani Sisters: Submerged in Time

The Safarani Sisters: Submerged in Time is a solo show of new work by the Iranian-born, Boston-based twin sisters. Ethereal and deeply moving, the show addresses themes of time, longing, celebration and the intangible nature of memory through the artists’ signature video-paintings. On view at ShowUp Gallery in Boston’s South End through September 28, 2025.

Ming Fay: Edge of the Garden

A comprehensive exhibition of work by the sculptor Ming Fay opened last week at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. Edge of the Garden explores memory, cultural identity and connection to nature with over 100 objects from Fay’s abundant oeuvre. Misstropolis talks with Parker Fay, son of the great artist who passed away in February, about growing up in the studio, the exhibition and the importance of gardens to his remarkable father’s art and life.

Arrival Art Fair

At Arrival Art Fair in North Adams, MA a spirit of congeniality, persistence and hope spread from the art to the hearts and minds of participants and visitors alike. Again and again people remarked on the friendly, welcoming atmosphere. Over 30 galleries from across the U.S. participated, bringing a wide range of contemporary painting, sculpture, photography, design, textiles and furniture to the heart of the Berkshires.

How to Triennial: Downtown, Resistance is the Name of the Game

In Part Three of our How to Triennial Series, we head to downtown Boston where the Triennial public art installations reflect today’s public mood of outrage and resistance. Challenging hegemonic untruths in Native histories, political apathy around youth homelessness, and unchecked violence against immigrants, these works are inspiring acts of protest in themselves.

How to Triennial: A Sunday in Charlestown

In our second guide to the Boston Public Art Triennial, we enjoy the Charlestown Navy Yard where four powerful works of pubic art respond to the historic maritime site with fresh perspectives on urgent issues including climate change, connection to nature, Black motherhood, and finding space for joy.

How to Triennial: Mattapan, Dorchester and Fenway Sites

The inaugural edition of the Boston Public Art Triennial is here, the result of years of planning, collaboration and work. This once-every-three-years celebration of public art’s power to unite and lift up a city gives us multiple opportunities to see art in neighborhoods we know well and those we’ve yet to explore. Misstropolis has created a series called How to Triennial. In this edition, we take you on two art-packed tours of multiple Triennial sites, through Matappan, Dorchester and Fenway. Next up in the series: Charlestown Navy Yard and Downtown on a date.

Fabiola Jean-Louis Reimagines Haiti's Future Using the Magic of its Past

A solo exhibition of papier-mâché sculpture and paintings by Haitian-American visual activist Fabiola Jean-Louis at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum presents a transformative vision of Haitian spirituality and culture. The artist talks with Misstropolis about why she chose paper, inspiring social change, and diving deep into the waters of the abyss in a search for freedom.

The Visionary Series: Petra Slinkard of the Peabody Essex Museum

Petra Slinkard has devoted her career to educating the public about the role fashion and design play in the human experience. Through extensive cross-cultural research and partnerships with global leaders in the field, Slinkard has established herself as an expert-to-watch and helped make PEM’s innovative and inclusive fashion initiative into one of the best in the country. With storytelling as her magic power, she brings the past into the present in ways which capture hard-to-reach contemporary audiences. She is one of the women putting the Boston area on the map as a global cultural hub, and for all those reasons, she is the latest in Misstropolis’ Visionary Series.

Future Fossils at MAAM

An important new show opens at the MassArt Art Museum (MAAM) this Thursday, January 23. Curated by Ginger Gregg Duggan and Judith Hoos Fox of the independent consultancy c2-curatorsquared, in collaboration with MAAM’s Director Lisa Tung, Future Fossils brings together the work of 20 international artists representing tremendous diversity of place, material, process, thematic concerns and career stage. The exhibition’s scale and themes make it one of the most important on Boston’s 2025 cultural calendar.

Sam Fields, Weaver Goddess

Sam Fields uses commonplace, feminine and domestic-coded materials to make art which arbitrary hierarchies of taste. Aesthetic distinctions impact class distinctions, gender identity and social power dynamics. Her art begs the question, “Who gets to decide what is good taste and bad?”

Sneha Shrestha, a.k.a. IMAGINE's Visual Meditations

Sneha Shrestha, who goes by the artist name Imagine, blends graffiti, geometric abstraction and traditional Himalayan design to create work that examines the sacrifice, longing and hope of the Nepali diaspora. In her paintings and soaring public murals, her audacious colors and balletic lettering speak to the resiliency and power of the human spirit.

Edra Soto's Architectural Intervention

Edra Soto mines the rich history of Puerto Rican vernacular architecture in her public installations and wall sculptures. An artist, curator and educator now based in Chicago, Soto brings an academic rigor and emotional authenticity to work made in the tradition of Puerto Rican ironwork called rejas, found in working class neighborhoods like the one where she grew up. She reveals the often ignored African foundations of post war motifs and challenges hegemonic erasure of Puerto Rico’s colonial condition.