ON STAGE & IN THE GALLERIES FALL 2018
We’ll celebrate the 10th anniversary of LeWitt’s tenure at MASS MoCA with our friends from Yale University Art Gallery and the Williams College Museum of Art with a series of artist talks, stories, and scholarly discussion on Saturday, November 17th, with a full day of activities punctuated by performances from artists whose work has been influenced by Sol’s. Join us for that. There are lots of other reasons to come back this fall: The FreshGrass Festival — a raucous weekend of music, art, food, and friends — kicks off a knock-out season on our stages. Heavenly voiced, aptly named Angel Olsen, guitar-player-with-mystique Bonnie “Prince” Billy, and front-womanwithout-inhibition Merill Garbus’ tUnE-yArDs highlight a stellar indie rock and pop line-up. A powerful filmic take on Chekhov’s The Seagull will also feature live music, and we expect a one-of-a-kind made-at-MASS MoCA moment when Wilco’s Glenn Kotche, choreographer Danielle Agami, and mad man Jon Hamm converge in North Adams for a work-in-progress showing of their hard-to-classify collaboration: it’s not quite theater, not quite dance, but a totally mesmerizing exploration of desire. We hope to see you in the galleries too: we’ve extended Liz Glynn’s run in Building 5 through early winter; there’s still time for one last long look at Etel Adnan’s sweetly searing color studies, Allison Janae Hamilton’s magically haunting Pitch, and the stunning and barely lit paintings of The Lure of the Dark. And if you haven’t noticed, there is new art in our Anselm Kiefer gallery (open through late November), and Laurie Anderson has switched up some things as well. The long lines for Turrell get easier to manage this time of year, so take a plunge into the light (or into the frigid waters of Taryn Simon’s A Cold Hole, for the truly intrepid).
Joseph Thompson Director P.S. There’s no better time to become a MASS MoCA member than right now. Members get the most MASS MoCA, including free admission to visit the galleries every day, as well as good discounts at our retail store and performing arts events.
Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #439, May 1985.
Sol LeWitt at MASS MoCA: whoa, where did that 10 years go? Sol’s epic wall drawing retrospective has not only delighted well over a million patrons, but the whole idea of a deep-dive, long-term “museum within the museum” became the dynamo that drove our collaboration with the Hall Art Foundation and Anselm Kiefer, Jenny Holzer, Laurie Anderson, and James Turrell. When Sol said that the idea is the machine that makes the art, he knew what he was talking about.
FESTIVAL
MEMBERS
FRESHGRASS FESTIVAL
COCKTAILS WITH CURATORS
September 14–16
Sat. September 29, 5:30pm
p. 3
p.12
LIVE MUSIC
LIVE MUSIC
ANGEL OLSEN
+ JULIANNA BARWICK Sat. September 29, 8pm
THE DECEMBERISTS Thurs. October 4, 8pm p. 4
p. 4
LIVE MUSIC
READING + CONVERSATION
HAROLD LÓPEZ-NUSSA Sat. October 6, 8pm p. 5
AKWAEKE EMEZI & ALLISON JANAE HAMILTON Thurs. October 11, 6pm p. 11
LIVE MUSIC
PERFORMANCE IN THE GALLERIES
BONNIE “PRINCE” BILLY + THE OTHER YEARS
Sat. October 13, 8pm
NACHT UND TRÄUME Sat. October 20, 4pm p. 11
p. 5
LIVE MUSIC
BENEFIT
SHAREEF KEYES & THE GROOVE
MASS MoCA IN NYC
Sat. October 20, 8pm
Wed. October 24, 6pm
p. 6
FILM + LIVE MUSIC
p. 6
LIVE MUSIC
I AM A SEAGULL Sat. October 27, 8pm p. 7
TUNE-YARDS + U.S. GIRLS
Tues. October 30, 8pm p. 7
FALL 2018 TICKETS: 413.662.2111 x1 | massmoca.org
COMEDY
ARTIST TALK
CHICAGO CITY LIMITS Sat. November 3, 8pm
TARYN SIMON Thurs. November 8, 6pm p. 11
p. 8
MEMBERS
WORK-IN-PROGRESS: THEATER
COCKTAILS WITH CURATORS
THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER
Sat. November 10, 5:30pm
Sat. November 10, 8pm
p. 12
CELEBRATION
p. 8
TALK
LEWITT x10
A CLOSER LOOK AT ETEL ADNAN
Sat. November 17 p.9
Thurs. November 29, 6:30pm p. 11
WORK-IN-PROGRESS: THEATER
SUNDANCE INSTITUTE THEATRE LAB
WORK-IN-PROGRESS: UNDEFINABLE
FISHING Sat. December 8, 8pm p. 10
Fri. December 7, 8pm p. 10
#lewittx10 #solfie #massmoca In honor of the 10th anniversary of our Sol Lewitt exhibition — and the young visitor who truly made this place his own during our annual Free Day last winter — show us your best “Solfie.” Hashtag a pic of you and your favorite Sol LeWitt at MASS MoCA to enter a drawing to win a family membership to the museum.
FALL 2018 TICKETS: 413.662.2111 x1 | massmoca.org
Photo: Douglas Mason
BLUEGRASS + ROOTS MUSIC FESTIVAL
FRESHGRASS More Than 50 Bands FRI.
TRAMPLED BY TURTLES • YONDER MOUNTAIN STRING BAND RHIANNON GIDDENS • DELLA MAE • THE WHISKEY TREATY ROADSHOW • THE LONESOME DAYS • PINEDROP THE FRESHGRASS COMPOSITION COMMISSION: WORLD PREMIERE OF NEW MUSIC BY RHIANNON GIDDENS
SAT.
FLOGGING MOLLY • INDIGO GIRLS • BÉLA FLECK RHIANNON GIDDENS • STEEP CANYON RANGERS THE MAMMALS • DAROL ANGER AND FRIENDS: MUSIC FOR OUR PEOPLE • MOLSKY’S MOUNTAIN DRIFTERS UPSTATE • EMILY KEENER • BERKLEE AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC PROGRAM • ANDREW VOGTS • JEB BARRY AND THE PAWN SHOP SAINTS • DUO EAMON MAMMA’S MARMALADE PLUCKIN’: A BLUEGRASS TRIBUTE TO THE GRATEFUL DEAD WITH ALISON BROWN AND THE FRESHGRASS ALL-STARS WORKSHOPS WITH BÉLA FLECK AND ALTAN BAND IN A BOX WITH THE MAMMALS
SUN.
RICKY SKAGGS and KENTUCKY THUNDER • I’M WITH HER ALTAN • KEITH LITTLE AND MOLLY TUTTLE • ALISON BROWN LEYLA McCALLA • EMEL MATHLOUTHI • TWISTED PINE YACOUBA SISSOKO • BERKLEE AMERICAN ROOTS MUSIC PROGRAM • NELL & JIM BAND • COMMON FOLK JAM DOUBLE DIAMOND • IZZY HELTAI • RAMBLIN JUG STOMPERS FRESHSCORES: LIVE MUSIC / SILENT FILM WORKSHOPS WITH BRUCE MOLSKY AND DAROL ANGER, HAPPY AND ADAM TRAUM CUSTOM GUITAR + BANJO RAFFLES, WORKSHOPS, LUTHIERS, CAMPING, JAM SESSIONS, MIND-BLOWING ART, BERKSHIRE-FRESH FOOD, FRESHKIDS
FESTIVAL PASSES AND SINGLE-DAY TICKETS AVAILABLE
September 14–16 freshgrass.com
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LIVE MUSIC
Saturday, September 29, 8pm
ANGEL OLSEN with JULIANNA BARWICK
“Knockout vocals, driving guitars, and a killer sense of humor that makes no apologies.” — NPR From the low-fi, sparse folk-melancholy of her 2010 EP, Strange Cacti, to the electrified, polished rock ‘n’ roll bursting from 2016’s beloved and acclaimed My Woman, Angel Olsen has refused to succumb to a single genre, expectation, or vision. Singing her precise lyrics with a warbling wild voice that blends Dolly Parton and Patti Smith, Olsen swirls sun-kissed dream pop and brooding garage rock into something impressionistic and new — and she’s never better than when she’s solo acoustic, as she will be here. Electronic artist Julianna Barwick’s hypnotic, otherworldly sounds open the show. HUNTER CENTER $30 ADVANCE | $40 DAY OF | $50 PREFERRED
Photo: Kylie Coutts
LIVE MUSIC
Thursday, October 4, 8pm
THE DECEMBERISTS Rock redux Limited tickets available — call now to reserve. 413.664.4481 x1 HUNTER CENTER | $45 ADVANCE | $55 DAY OF
Photo courtesy of the artist
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LIVE MUSIC
Saturday, October 6, 8pm
HAROLD LÓPEZ-NUSSA Cuban dance night Harold López-Nussa flies direct Havana > North Adams to deliver the full range and richness of his native Cuban music. The pianist and bandleader combines distinctive pop, classical, and folkloric elements into a wild Cuban jazz. Prepare to be enthralled. CLUB B10 | $16 STUDENTS + ADVANCE $26 DAY OF | $40 PREFERRED Sponsored by the Hans and Kate Morris Fund for New Music Photo courtesy of the artist
LIVE MUSIC
Saturday, October 13, 8pm
BONNIE “PRINCE” BILLY with THE OTHER YEARS
Heartland icon An enigma of the folk-rock world — The New Yorker calls him “one of the country’s most celebrated singersongwriters” despite the fact that he’s never signed with a label and rarely tours — Bonnie “Prince” Billy is hard to find, easy to love, and impossible to dismiss. Singing about bottomless heartache and cowboy philosophy, he’s here with a sprawling band for an intimate and uncensored show this fall. The Louisville folk duo The Other Years warms up the house. HUNTER CENTER | $30 ADVANCE $40 DAY OF | $50 PREFERRED
Photo: Lindsey Rome
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LIVE MUSIC
Saturday, October 20, 8pm
SHAREEF KEYES & THE GROOVE There’s a whole lot of rhythm going round Brooklyn-bred artist Shareef Keyes draws equal inspiration from James Brown and Wu-Tang. Together with his band, The Groove, he is earning a reputation for highenergy live performances that transport audiences to the golden era of funk. Simply irresistible. Limited seating, with lots of room to dance. CLUB B10 $16 STUDENTS + ADVANCE | $26 DAY OF Sponsored by the Hans and Kate Morris Fund for New Music
Photo courtesy of the artist
BENEFIT
Wednesday, October 24
MASS MoCA BENEFIT IN NYC TRIBECA 360° 10 DESBROSSES STREET, NYC Honor the legacy of legendary MASS MoCA supporters Hans and Kate Morris during MASS MoCA’s annual benefit in Manhattan. The evening includes a live auction of experiences and artworks by Gregory Crewdson, Rachel Howard, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Allison Janae Hamilton, TM Davy, Sam McKinniss, Vincent Valdez, and Joseph Havel, with limitededition artworks by Natasha Bowdoin available for purchase. Photo: Joanna Williams
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FILM + LIVE MUSIC
Saturday, October 27, 8pm
I AM A SEAGULL Life imitates art Immerse yourself in an eccentric community of actors and their frenzied and loving attempt to stage Chekhov’s play The Seagull in upstate NY. Playfully blending documentary and narrative, this film dissolves boundaries between audience and performer, representation and reality. A folksy set from musicians featured in the film starts off the evening. CLUB B10 $12 STUDENTS + ADVANCE | $22 DAY OF
Photo courtesy of the artist
LIVE MUSIC
Tuesday, October 30, 8pm
4AD PRESENTS
TUNE-YARDS + U.S. GIRLS
Ecstatic pop Shape-shifting New England native Merrill Garbus a.k.a. tUnE-yArDs released her fourth record, I Can Feel You Creep Into My Private Life, this year, and it has been praised as “a sleek, radical evolution” (The New York Times). She is joined by 4AD labelmates U.S. Girls, who bring a raucous eight-piece band to perform their new album, In A Poem Unlimited — “a compulsively listenable tour de force that’s one of the best pop records of 2018 so far.” (GQ) Come early: Museum galleries open 3–7pm. HUNTER CENTER | $25 ADVANCE $35 DAY OF | $45 PREFERRED
Photo courtesy of the artist
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COMEDY
Saturday, November 3, 8pm presents
CHICAGO CITY LIMITS Freestyle comedy Audience-inspired hilarity reaches new heights with the brilliant improv of Chicago City Limits, NYC’s longestsurviving comedy revue. In a continuous run of more than 10,000 performances since opening its own theater in 1980 (after relocating from Chicago), the group has honed its social/political humor to a razor sharp edge. CLUB B10 | $16 STUDENTS + ADVANCE $26 DAY OF | $40 PREFERRED
Photo courtesy of the artist
WORK-IN-PROGRESS: THEATER
Saturday, November 10, 8pm
THE FALL OF THE HOUSE OF USHER SCORE BY PHILIP GLASS WRITTEN AND DIRECTED BY ARTHUR YORINKS & JIM SIMPSON This spellbinding stage version of Edgar Allan Poe’s masterpiece is written and directed by Arthur Yorinks and Jim Simpson and features a score by Philip Glass, adapted from the House of Usher opera that Glass and Yorinks created in 1988. The work-inprogress presentation is replete with puppets, musicians, actors, and projections — and is suggested for audiences 16 and older. HUNTER CENTER | $10 STUDENTS + ADVANCE $20 DAY OF | $30 PREFERRED This program is supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Image courtesy of the artist
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Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #1247, August 2007
Celebration + Symposium, Pop-ups + Performances
CELEBRATE
LEWITT x 10 In year 10 of our 25-year exhibition, Sol LeWitt: A Wall Drawing Retrospective, “the most perfect union of contemporary art and architecture in the United States,” (Los Angeles Times) we invite artists including Laurie Anderson, Spencer Finch, Quindar with Wilco’s Mikael Jorgensen, New York new music ensemble Tigue, Karl Larson, Jeffrey Gibson, Barbara Takenaga, Joe Wardwell, and LeWitt master draftsman John Hogan to pop up, share stories, and present work inspired by the father of conceptualism. Join us for a full day of events, including a LeWitt scavenger hunt for kids. A celebration dinner and performance cap the night.
Saturday, November 17 PERFORMANCE AND CELEBRATION DETAILS:
massmoca.org/lewittx10 This program is supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation and sponsored in part by Berkshire Magazine.
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THEATER + LIVE MUSIC
Friday, December 7, 8pm
SUNDANCE INSTITUTE THEATRE LAB James and Jerome James Harrison Monaco and Jerome Ellis make hyper-literary, live-music story performances using lush, powerful combinations of acoustic and electronic music with live narration. Winning raves from Joe’s Pub to Lincoln Center, their new work The Conversationalists, created in collaboration with director Annie Tippe, is an original, live-scored film that audience members only see in their own minds. CLUB B10 | $8 STUDENTS + ADVANCE $18 DAY OF | $28 PREFERRED
Photo: Theo Cote
WORK-IN-PROGRESS: THEATER
Saturday, December 8, 8pm
FISHING Masters at work This work-in-progress showing offers a first look at the new all-star collaboration between director/choreographer Danielle Agami, actor Jon Hamm, and Wilco percussionist Glenn Kotche — a ravishing piece of multidisciplinary performance that explores the beautiful, simple absurdity of desire. HUNTER CENTER | $20 STUDENTS $30 ADVANCE | $40 DAY OF | $54 PREFERRED This program is supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
Photo: Matt Winkelmeyer/Getty Imagesfor SXSW
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READING + CONVERSATION
Thursday, October 11, 6pm
AKWAEKE EMEZI AND ALLISON JANAE HAMILTON Acclaimed Nigerian-born author Akwaeke Emezi draws us into her debut novel Freshwater. Like exhibiting artist Allison Janae Hamilton, Emezi explores ancestral relationships, the world of ghosts, spirituality, and the “mysteries of the self” in a semi-autobiographical tale about Ada, a girl with multiple identities and “one foot on the other side.” Join us for a reading followed by a conversation with Emezi and Hamilton. B6.2 PROW
| $5 STUDENTS + MEMBERS | $10 ADVANCE
This program is supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.
PERFORMANCE IN THE GALLERIES
Saturday, October 20, 4pm
NACHT UND TRÄUME Surrounded by the moody, moonlit paintings of The Lure of the Dark, experience the dreamworld of tenor Michael Kuhn and pianist Thomas Weaver. Performed from a bed, “Nacht und Träume” takes us on a magical, emotional journey through the moving music of 19th-century German songs composed by Schubert and Schumann and inspired by Romantic poetry. Photo courtesy of the artist
GALLERY 4.2.2 | LIMITED SEATING | RESERVE: 413.662.2111x1 This program is supported by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. ARTIST TALK
Thursday, November 8, 6pm
TARYN SIMON Taryn Simon’s monumental installations — A Cold Hole + Assembled Audience — examine the ways in which individual intention and public performance collide in the ancient rituals of cold-water immersion and applause. Simon discusses the research and histories at the foundation of her work. Photo courtesy of the artist and MASS MoCA
CLUB B10
| $5 STUDENTS + MEMBERS | $10 ADVANCE
TALK
Thursday, November 29, 6:30pm
A CLOSER LOOK AT ETEL ADNAN Etel Adnan, Untitled, 2017. Oil on canvas © Etel Adnan. Courtesy of Galerie Lelong & Co.
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In conjunction with the artist’s exhibition A yellow sun A green sun a yellow sun A red sun a blue sun, curator Elise Y. Chagas talks about Etel Adnan and the poetry, painting, and politics of the Arab-American artist. GALLERIES
| $5 STUDENTS + MEMBERS | $10 ADVANCE
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FREE FOR MEMBERS
COCKTAILS WITH CURATORS Saturdays, 5:30pm
Tour, talk, and toast with the organizers of MASS MoCA’s major exhibitions and performances. September 29
Denise Markonish talks Laurie Anderson November 10
Sue Killam and Rachel Chanoff talk Performing Arts RSVP: members@massmoca.org Photo: Joanna Williams
MEMBERS LOUNGE Saturdays, 7–8pm
Membership is a verb. Join us, and fellow museum lovers, before the show. September 29
Angel Olsen
October 13
Bonnie “Prince” Billy November 10
Arthur Yorinks, The Fall of the House of Usher RSVP: members@massmoca.org Photo: Olympia Shannon
MEMBERS HOURS
JAMES TURRELL & LAURIE ANDERSON Thursdays, 5–6pm Saturdays, 10–11am Extended hours for members to experience James Turrell’s Into the Light and Laurie Anderson’s Chalkroom and Aloft — with no lines and no appointments required.
Photo: Jason Reinhold
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EXHIBITION
LAURIE ANDERSON AT THE SHRINK’S & FROM THE AIR
Two new works, At the Shrink’s (1975) and From the Air (2008), bring Laurie Anderson’s voice into focus. Diminutive sculptures, with video projected onto them, become talking holograms. Anderson invites us to lean in for two detailed stories. Laurie Anderson, From the Air, 2008. Photo: Vincent Valdez
Principal exhibition support is provided by the Sakana Foundation. Major support is provided by the National Endowment for the Arts; the Rainbow Initiative Funds for Collaborative Cultural Project by Ministry of Culture, Taiwan; and National Chengchi University, Taiwan. Additional support is provided by Bowers & Wilkins.
EXHIBITION
ANSELM KIEFER Visit the Hall Art Foundation’s Anselm Kiefer installation to see four newly added works: a monumental landscape painting and sculptural scenes that the artist created merging the Kabbalah and German history. On view seasonally, through Nov. 25.
Anselm Kiefer, installation view
The Hall Art Foundation makes available works of postwar and contemporary art from its collection and from the collection of Andrew and Christine Hall for the enjoyment and education of the public. In addition to the dedicated gallery space at MASS MoCA, the Hall Art Foundation operates its own museums in Reading, Vermont, and Derneburg, Germany.
KIDSPACE
COME TO YOUR SENSES:
ART TO SEE, SMELL, HEAR, TASTE, AND TOUCH Come to Your Senses embraces multiple perspectives on problemsolving through a series of multi-sensory works that begin with paintings by local students. Principal support for Come to Your Senses at MASS MoCA is provided by Chrystina Geagan Parks and James R. Parks and ROAM: A Xtina Parks Gallery with generous contributing support from an anonymous donor, the Arthur I. and Susan Maier Fund, Guido’s Fresh Marketplace, and Samantha and Daniel Becker.
Christopher Eichorn, Untitled, 2018
Support for Sally Taylor’s Consenses project is provided by Ellen Poss, Leslie Williams and James Attwood, Vickie Zoellner, Gordon and Rehanna Uehling, Esmeralda Swartz, Simone and David Levinson, Jim and Susan Swartz, Jane and Scott Maxwell, Geralyn Dreyfous, Laurie David, Monika Mclennan, Kay Kendall and Jack Davies, Gogo Inc., and James Lapine.
EXHIBITION
TARYN SIMON
A COLD HOLE + ASSEMBLED AUDIENCE Taryn Simon transports the rituals of applause and cold-water immersion to the museum, examining the ways in which individual action and collective belief can reinforce — or disrupt — systems of power.
Taryn Simon, A Cold Hole, installation view, 2018. Photo: Jack Criddle
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Principal exhibition support is provided by Anne and Gregory Avis with contributing support from Raymond Learsy and Mary Ann and Bruno A. Quinson. Major exhibition support is provided by the National Endowment for the Arts, the Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, the Barr Foundation, and the Mass Cultural Council. Institutional exhibition support is provided by MASS MoCA’s Director’s Advisory Council. Related programming is funded in part by Mass Humanities, which receives support from the Mass Cultural Council and is an affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
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ALSO ON VIEW ROTATING EXHIBITIONS ETEL ADNAN NATASHA BOWDOIN CHRIS DOMENICK LIZ GLYNN ALLISON JANAE HAMILTON RACHEL HOWARD JANICE KERBEL MARY LUM THE LURE OF THE DARK: CONTEMPORARY PAINTERS CONJURE THE NIGHT THUMBS UP FOR THE MOTHERSHIP: DAWN DEDEAUX + LONNIE HOLLEY JOE WARDWELL NICK WHITMAN
LONG-TERM EXHIBITIONS JOSEPH BEUYS LOUISE BOURGEOIS SARAH CROWNER
SEASONAL Through November 25 unless otherwise noted ZAROUHIE ABDALIAN DEAN BALDWIN CHRIS GILLOOLY RICHARD NONAS MICHAEL OATMAN STEPHEN VITIELLO DRÉ WAPENAAR (through October 1) FRANZ WEST
AROUND TOWN BRUCE ODLAND + SAM AUINGER (O+A) MIKE GLIER KLAAS HÜBNER + ANDREW SCHROCK NATALIE JEREMIJENKO CHRISTINA KUBISCH WALTER FÄHNDRICH DON GUMMER VICTORIA PALERMO UPSIDE-DOWN TREES: REPLANTED
SPENCER FINCH JENNY HOLZER SOL LEWITT MICAH LEXIER METABOLIC STUDIO/ OPTICS DIVISION BARBARA ERNST PREY JARVIS ROCKWELL GUNNAR SCHONBECK JULIANNE SWARTZ JAMES TURRELL
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Sol LeWitt, Wall Drawing #880, September 1998
EXHIBITIONS
Photo: Jane Burns
ARTS EDUCATION AT MASS MoCA Through its nationally recognized arts education programs, MASS MoCA is a longstanding curricular cornerstone in the public schools of North Adams and northern Berkshire County — students here enjoy one of the strongest arts programs in the U.S., rooted in MASS MoCA’s unparalleled Kidspace exhibition and studio program. The museum reaches more than 2,500 elementary school students who visit at least three times each year for innovative experiences with visual and performing art. Many students get one-on-one time with exhibiting artists during intensive week-long residencies. Middle and high school students explore social justice through the art of Jenny Holzer, Lonnie Holley, and more. Nine local high schools participate in an annual art show when hundreds of student artworks are installed in MASS MoCA galleries for a wild spring weekend celebrating local student talent. To learn more or find out how you can support arts education programming: massmoca.org/education
Core education funding is provided by the W.L.S. Spencer Foundation. Education at MASS MoCA is made possible in part by the Institute of Museum and Library Services. Major education support is provided by George and Valerie Kennedy, MountainOne, John F. and Judith B. Remondi, Samantha and Daniel Becker, John DeRosa, the Ruth E. Proud Charitable Trust, Anne and Greg Avis, Linda Genereux and Timur Galen, Chrystina Geagan Parks and James R. Parks, the Milton and Dorothy Sarnoff Raymond Foundation, the Feigenbaum Foundation, Anders and Yukiko Schroeder, Holly Swett, and the National Endowment for the Arts. Additional education support is provided by the Mass Cultural Council, the Hemera Foundation, the Charles H. Hall Foundation, the Arthur I. and Susan Maier Fund, Scott and Lisa Stuart, Elizabeth Wadsworth and Paul Peppis, the Bessie Pappas Charitable Foundation, the Gateway Fund and the William and Margery Barrett Fund of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation, Duncan and Susan Brown, Patrick Sweeney, the Adelard A. Roy and Valeda Lea Roy Foundation, Sarah and Timothy Eustis, John and Anna Farrington, Will Frears, Amy B. Hudson, Adam Lippes, Daniel Mathieu and Thomas Potter, William Plapinger and Cassie Murray, Charlie and Amy Scharf, Jeffrey and Stacey Weber, Guido’s Fresh Marketplace, and anonymous (2). The Milton and Dorothy Sarnoff Raymond Foundation gives in memory of Sandy and Lynn Laitman.
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MAJOR SEASON SUPPORT Anonymous; Allen & Company; The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; Anne and Gregory Avis; Barr Foundation; Institute of Museum and Library Services, Government Agency; Jennifer and Jonathan Allan Soros Foundation; Allison and Edward Johnson; Daniel R. Lewis; Mass Cultural Council; Brenda R. Potter; Susy and Jack Wadsworth Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts; Anna-Maria and Stephen Kellen Foundation; Alan Beller; Joyce Bernstein and Lawrence Rosenthal; the Bohen Foundation; Alessia Bulgari; Gregory Crewdson and Juliane Hiam; the Educational Foundation of America; Bridget and Donald Fawcett; Wendy Fisher; Chrystina Geagan Parks and James R. Parks; Linda Genereux and Timur Galen; Agnes Gund; Andrew and Barbara Gundlach; Scott and Ellen Hand; Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation; George and Valerie Kennedy; Margaret and Joseph Koerner; Massachusetts Growth Capital Corporation; Hans and Kate Morris; National Endowment for the Arts; Anders and Yukiko Schroeder; Mark Simonian and Sheila Harley; Surdna Foundation; US Department of Agriculture, Rural Development; W.L.S. Spencer Foundation; Williams College; Elisabeth Roche Wilmers George W. Ahl III; the Artist’s Resource Trust (A.R.T.) Fund, a fund of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation; Arts Midwest; Daniel and Samantha Becker; Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation; Bloomberg Philanthropies; Simeon Bruner; Citi; Jennifer and Ian Deason; John DeRosa; John L. Gardiner; Robert L. Gold; Susan W. Gold; Francis Greenburger and Isabelle Autones; Orion and Lisa Howard; Joan and Jim Hunter; JKW Foundation; Joan Mitchell Foundation; the Milton and Dorothy Sarnoff Raymond Foundation; Nancy A. Nasher and David Haemisegger; The Porches Inn at MASS MoCA; The Robert W. Wilson Charitable Trust; Eileen and Robert Rominger; Ruth E. Proud Charitable Trust; Charlie Thurston; Elizabeth Wadsworth and Paul Peppis; Yale University Anonymous; AVANGRID Foundation; Berkshire Gas; Ellen J. Bernstein; Bradley and Terrie Bloom; City of Boston; Duncan and Susan Brown; City of North Adams; Connecticut Dept. of Economic and Community Development; Elizabeth Easton and James Traub; Feigenbaum Foundation; Formlabs; Donald Gummer and Meryl Streep; Hall Art Foundation; Andrew and Christine Hall; Frances Hellman and Warren Breslau; Highland Street Foundation; Peter and Marty Hurley; Elizabeth Johnson; Raymond Learsy; Carol LeWitt; Dorothy Lichtenstein; Joyce Linde; Mass Humanities; Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts; Renee G. and Hugh McColl; the Midas Collaborative; The Mohn Family Foundation; MountainOne; Sandra Muss; Caroline Niemczyk; North Adams Public Schools; Robert Rauschenberg Foundation; Rhode Island State Council on the Arts; Stephen and Andrea Ryan; Joan and Michael Salke; Dan
Schulman and Jennie Kassanoff; Carol and Bob Stegeman; Else Steiner; Sterling & Francine Clark Art Institute; Callie Sullivan and Hugh Montgomery; Holly Swett; Jay and Rachel Tarses; David and Julie Tobey Christopher and Alida Latham; Naomi Aberly and Laurence Lebowitz; the Arthur I. and Susan Maier Fund; the William J. & Margery S. Barrett Fund of the Berkshire Taconic Community Foundation; Thomas and Lily Beischer; Joan Benjamin and Laurence Cherkis; David Booth and Jane Garnett; Mark and Lauren Booth; Bright Ideas Brewing; Paul and Katie Buttenwieser; Kay and Elliot Cattarulla; Chip and Michele Moeller Chandler; Charles H. Hall Foundation; Stacy and Eric Cochran; Paula Cooper and Jack Macrae; Cultural Services of the French Embassy in the United States; Steven and Roberta Denning; Anouk Dey and Cameron Tudhope; Peter Dey and Phyllis Ortved; Dorothea L. Leonhardt Foundation; Nancy Fitzpatrick and Lincoln Russell; Maxine and Stuart Frankel Foundation; Meyer and Florence Frucher; Allan and Judy Fulkerson; Jennifer Gilbert and John Ellersick; Ann and Graham Gund; Carmela and Paul Haklisch; Kurt and Charlotte Hemr; Hemera Foundation; Jeffrey Horvitz; Adam and Alicia Ifshin; the Joseph and Evelyn Rosenblatt Charitable Fund; Casey Kaplan; Alix and Pam Karlan; Lizbeth and George Krupp; Thomas Lee and Ann Tenenbaum; Nancy Maier; Michael and Agnese Meehan; Suzanne Nash; New England Foundation for the Arts; Paula Cooper Gallery; Ken and Jennifer Pendery; Thomas and Barbara Putnam; John and Cynthia Reed; John F. and Judith B. Remondi; Liz and Samuel Robinson; Sakana Foundation; Mariko Silver and Thom Loubet; Scott and Lisa Stuart; The Thompson Family Foundation; Susanne Vielmetter David Aronowitz; Fritz Backus and Matthew Shakespeare; Robert and Barbara Bashevkin; Johannes Becker; Linda Becker; Stephen Berenson and Louise Barzilay; Berkshire Bank Foundation; Roz and Wally Bernheimer; Bessie Pappas Charitable Foundation; Blue Q; The Boston Foundation; Bruner/Cott Architects; Caroline Cunningham and Donald Young; Deering Banjo Company; EASTMAN; Michael and Barbara Eisenson; Girardi Distributors; Elizabeth and Steven Gruber; Dominique Haim; David and Charlene Howe; Stephen and Lisa Jenks; Meredith Kane; Harold Koda and Alan Kornberg; Main Street Hospitality; Henry McNeil; Richard and Ronay Menschel; Olivier and Laure Meslay; Leslie and Richard Morgenthal; Seth and Mary Nash; Paul Neely; Jeryl Oristaglio; David and Linda Paresky; Bruno and Mary Ann Quinson; Clifford Ross; David and Deborah Rothschild; James Coulter Scala; David Smith and Ranny Cooper; Jid and John Sprague; Stop & Shop; Patrick Sweeney; T. Rowe Price; Peter and Laurie Thomsen; University of Massachusetts, UMass Lowell; Mariët Westermann and Charles Pardoe; Sandra Wijnberg and Hugh Freund; Francis Williams and Keris Salmon
Anonymous; Claire Angel; Ann Artschwager; Alice Aycock; John and Astrid Baumgardner; Erich Bechtel; Judith Benjamin; Scott Bergeron and Janet Sawyer-Bergeron; Stephanie Bernheim; Robert Branon; Ellen and Casey Cogut; Michael and Licia Conforti; Allen Coulter and Kim Knowlton; Caroline Crandall and Nima Ghamsari; Jeffrey Davies; The Dobbins Foundation; Michele and Jim Dodge; Adrian and Liz Ann Doherty; Robert and Evelyn Doran; Virginia Dwan; Elizabeth Ellrodt and Scott Schweighauser; Sarah and Timothy Eustis; Brian and Vikki Fairbank; Anna and John Farrington; Spencer Finch; Randy Fishman; Jason and Sarah Forney; Andrew and Tracy Foster; David Fox; Will Frears; Walter and May-Wo Giger; The Goergen Foundation; Anne and Alain Goldrach; Annette Grant and Jonathan Baumbach; Carolyn Gray; Robin Greenspun; Claude Grunitzky and Marie-Cécile TeissèdreGrunitzky; Katherine Hand and Matt Brogan; Michael and Sandra Hecht; Betsy and Jack Hellmann; Allison and Keyes Hill-Edgar; Thomas and Janet Holland; Ian and Madeline Hooper; Amy B. Hudson; Christopher Jones and Deborah McAlister; Bill and Kelly Kaiser; Lori and Richard Kent; Gabe and Liz Kind; Leslie Kogod and Laurie Goldberger; Werner and Sarah-Ann Kramarsky; John and Deborah Larkin; Gary Leopold and Kim Colombi; Katie MacCarthy; Monica M. Mackey; Dan Mathieu and Thomas Potter; May and Samuel Rudin Family Foundation; Martha and Colin Moseley; Charles and Anne Mott; Caitlin and Mitch Nash; Sarah Needham; Molly Nordstrom; Richard Orris and Jennifer Nathan; Pine Cobble School; William Plapinger and Cassie Murray; Marko and Cynthia Remec; Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; Stephanie and Juan Ruiz; Charlie and Amy Scharf; Charles Schulze and Lucy Holland; Gail Segal; Howard Shapiro; SNF USA; Diane Steinmetz; Richard and Janet Stratton; Lauren and Ben Svenson; Corey and Tallie Taylor; Mark and Amy Tercek; John W. Thoman Jr. and Lee T. Venolia; Liz Thompson; Jamee Todd; Donald Toumey and Loong Foo Chan; Jeffrey and Stacey Weber; Daryl Wickstrom and Steve Cunningham; Howard Williams and Thalassa Curtis; Susan and Chuck Willis; Donald and Barbara Zucker
VISIT BOX OFFICE & INFORMATION
ACCESSIBILITY
413.662.2111 | massmoca.org 1040 MASS MoCA Way North Adams, MA 01247
Wheelchairs and event listening devices are available.
PLAN YOUR VISIT
We hope you’ll visit downtown North Adams, check out Mount Greylock (Massachusetts’ highest peak), and dip into neighboring Adams and Williamstown while you’re in the Berkshires.
HOURS
Fall: 11am–5pm, closed Tuesdays (Closed Thanksgiving and Christmas Day)
berkshires.org | destinationwilliamstown.org explorenorthadams.com | mohawktrail.com
MUSEUM ADMISSION
(Good for 2 days in a row!) Adults $20 Seniors / Veterans $18 Students w/ ID $12 Kids (6–16) $8 Mass. EBT / WIC Card Holder $2
FOOD & DRINK & SHOPPING
Kids under 6 and museum members, including MCLA and Williams College students, always visit for free. Admission to Kidspace is always free. ArtBar is open weekends and every day during school breaks.
Lickety Split Café 413.346.4560 | licketysplitatmassmoca.com
Hardware: The MASS MoCA Store 413.664.4481 x7 | shop.massmoca.org
MASS MoCA by Design 413.652.2143 | 50 Spring Street, Williamstown
A-oK Berkshire Barbeque aokbbq.com | 917.561.6800
3 Museum Combo Ticket MASS MoCA, The Clark, and save 20% at Williams College Museum of Art store
$34
ArtCountry Combo Ticket MASS MoCA, The Clark, Williams College Museum of Art, Bennington Museum
$40
Norman Rockwell Combo Ticket MASS MoCA, Norman Rockwell Museum
$34
Gramercy Bistro 413.663.5300 | gramercybistro.com
Hancock Shaker Village Combo Ticket MASS MoCA, Hancock Shaker Village
$34
ROAM: A Xtina Parks Gallery xtina.photo | 413.663.8000
PUBLIC TOURS ( free with admission)
Daily, 1pm Building 6; 3pm Buildings 4&5 Friday, 12pm Art = Truth Saturday, 12pm Sol LeWitt Sunday, 12pm Anselm Kiefer (through November 25)
LIVE EVENTS
Reserve tickets for all performances even if admission is free. All performances and artists are subject to change, and often sell out. No refunds or exchanges. All events are rain or shine. Full bar service is available at most events.
Bright Ideas Brewing 413.346.4460 | brightideasbrewing.com Galleries at 1315 MASS MoCA Way Ferrin Contemporary | 413.346.4004 CYNTHIA-REEVES | 413.398.5257
Subway Sandwich Shop 413.664.8020 | 1 Main Street, North Adams Tunnel City Coffee 413.398.5304 | tunnelcitycoffee.com
SMILE
We often document visitors in our galleries and during events. If you do not wish to be included in images we publish, please alert the box office.
TAKE PART
We hope you’ll share your images too!
#massmoca
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Photo: Aden Seeley
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