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Un-monument | Re-monument | De-monument

This multi-year program, funded by a $3 million grant from the Mellon Foundation, is bringing temporary monuments and free programming to the city.

Update: We’re commissioning temporary monuments and supporting a projection mapping workshop so artists can imagine ways of commemorating the people, places, and events that are important to our communities. Apply by Monday, January 13, 2025, at 5 p.m. ET.

Un-monument Call to Artists


What is a monument? Who do we choose to memorialize? How can our public spaces reflect what is important to us?

We’re collaborating with artists, local cultural organizations, and community members to imagine ways of commemorating the people, places, and events that are important to our communities.

“Un-monument | Re-monument | De-monument: Transforming Boston” is bringing temporary monuments and free public programming to neighborhoods across Boston.

This multi-year program will enable artists to promote a far more engaged, reflective, creative, and active relationship with the city’s landscape and built environment.

A metal frame of a house with no walls stands on the Rose Kennedy Greenway
"Going to Ground" by Larissa Rogers, photo by Alex Joachim

Temporary Monuments

We’re commissioning artworks from groundbreaking artists and partnering with celebrated local arts organizations.

The Un-monument initiative includes six curatorial approaches to commissioning temporary monuments across the City. Some Un-monument temporary monuments were selected through an open call to artists led by the Mayor’s Office of Arts and Culture. Others are the result of direct commissions by five organizations serving as curatorial partners:

With multiple curators, we hope to create opportunities for more perspectives to join the conversation. Commissioning local organizations also supports Boston’s creative ecosystem and creates a more natural distribution of projects, histories, and community participation in this city-wide dialogue.

A woman draws on a pole with artwork covering it, the word "Hope" written on the pole in the foreground
"Generation Peace Poles" by Ruth K. Henry, photo by Luis Antonion Thompson

Below, learn more about the temporary monument projects.

2024 Temporary Monuments

2025 Temporary Monuments

Through this call to artists, we also selected eight research and development projects to support through the Un-monument program.

2024 Research and Development Projects

Public Art Map



 

 

 

 

 

 

Public Conversations

In 2024, we held a series of three conversations at The Embrace that explored the interconnections between monuments, public memory, and daily lives. We will continue these conversations in the summer of 2025.

The Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture, in collaboration with The Hutchins Center for African and African American Research at Harvard University, City of Boston Parks and Recreation, Embrace Boston, and Friends of the Public Garden, held a series of public discussions featuring leading academics, poets, and historians.

Our goal is to invigorate public space by bringing rich conversations into the broader public, using The Embrace and the Kings' legacy as inspiration. Together, we can create a space for broader expressions of the powerful diversity and complexity of American stories.

Following the public conversations, we held free dinner receptions facilitated by local artists and cultural leaders in relaxed settings through a collaboration with Downtown Boston Business Improvement District to continue the conversation and deepen public engagement.

This series will return in the summer of 2025! Keep an eye out on this page, on social media, or via email to learn more when the next series is announced.

Below, take a look back at the 2024 public conversations. (Photos by Malakhai Pearson)

Imani Perry and Joshua Bennett on stage in front of The Embrace

POETRY, PUBLIC ART, AND THE POLITICS OF MEMORY

Wednesday, July 31

This discussion was hosted by Professor Brandon Terry and featured Professor Joshua Bennett and Professor Imani Perry.

Poetry, especially since the great age of epic poetry, has been a profoundly important technology of communal memory and stories of peoplehood all around the globe. Our first event looked to this legacy and its present-day importance with Joshua Bennett, one of the country’s most celebrated poet-scholars, and Imani Perry, one of our nation’s most prominent public intellectuals, as they engaged in a public conversation about the art and politics of memory.

Backdropped by The Embrace, Boston’s most talked-about work of public art in decades, these two extraordinary thinkers reflected on hard questions about who and what we remember, the form and function of civic memory, and the ways that art may be able to facilitate a more inclusive and insightful practice of imagination.

We learned together about the nature of collective and civic memories and the different forms that human beings have experimented with to pass them down through generations.

Prof. Kerri Greenidge and Dr. Kyera Singleton on stage in front of The Embrace

BLACK LIVES, BLACK STORIES, OUR HISTORY: THE AFRICAN DIASPORA AND NEW ENGLAND

Wednesday, August 21

This discussion was hosted by Kyera Singleton and featured Professor Kerri Greenidge and Professor Kendra T. Field.

During this electrifying public conversation at Boston Common, Tufts University historians Kerri Greenidge and Kendra T. Field delved into the untold histories of the African Diaspora in New England. Moderated by Kyera Singleton, the dynamic director of the Royall House and Slave Quarters, this event illuminated the rich and often overlooked narratives that have shaped the region.

Greenidge and Fields, both renowned for their pathbreaking work on abolitionism, the early civil rights movement, family history, popular memory, and the profound impact of slavery in New England, introduced innovative public scholarship that challenged and expanded our understanding of the past. This engaging panel sparked dialogue and offered fresh perspectives on the enduring legacy of Black history in New England. This event provided an opportunity to engage with groundbreaking historians who are redefining our understanding of the region’s history.

Michael J. Sandel and Brandon Terry on stage in front of The Embrace

THE FUTURE OF AMERICAN DEMOCRACY

Monday, September 30

This discussion was hosted by Professor Brandon Terry and featured Professor Michael J. Sandel.

This compelling and timely public conversation reflected on the pressing challenges facing America’s democratic institutions and traditions today.

Michael Sandel, a Harvard political philosopher celebrated for his accessible and thought-provoking explorations of justice, ethics, and democracy, is the author of influential works like Democracy’s Discontent and The Tyranny of Merit. His work encourages us to reflect on the moral dimensions of political and civic life, asking fundamental questions about fairness, equality, and the common good.

This conversation responded to the pivotal moment when many Americans were feeling that the country’s democratic institutions and traditions were under threat. From growing political polarization to rising concerns about voter rights, civic trust, fairness, and governmental accountability, the future of American democracy appeared uncertain. Together, these two scholars brought clarity, urgency, and hope to a conversation that couldn’t have been more timely or essential.

Community Engagement

Continuing the Conversation

At our 2024 public conversations, we worked with Payal Kumar, an engagement consultant, to develop strategies that would encourage continued dialogue among attendees following each talk. Below, read some reflections from community members about monuments, public art, democracy, and culture.

Attendees at "Black Lives, Black Stories, Our History: The African Diaspora and New England" converse at the reception
Photo by Malakhai Pearson

 

Advisory Team

As part of this program, the Mayor’s Office of Arts & Culture assembled an advisory team that provides thought partnership, weighs in on community engagement strategies, offers critical feedback, and more throughout the duration of the program.

The Un-monument Advisory Team is made up of business owners, academics, activists, non-profit organization directors, school leaders, educators, and artists from across the city.

Education and Interpretation

Additionally, MOAC is broadening its impact through partnerships with the Boston Art Review and the Massachusetts College of Art and Design (MassArt). 

The Boston Art Review will expand upon the work in Un-monument through research, writing, and publishing about monuments in Boston. Faculty, staff, and students from MassArt will create free and accessible educational and interpretive materials, signage, and an online educational component.

Background

This programming is made possible by a grant from the Mellon Foundation's Monuments Project. Our deepest gratitude to the Mellon Foundation and all of our partners for their support of this program.

Logos of Mayor's Office of Arts and Culture, Boston Art Commission, Boston Art Review, Boston Public Art Triennial, Downtown Boston BID, Embrace Boston, Emerson Contemporary, Friends of the Public Garden, Massachusetts College of Art and Design, The Hutchins Center for African & African American Research, Mellon Foundation, National Center of Afro-American Artists, North American Indian Center of Boston, City of Boston Parks and Recreation, and Pao Arts Center

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