Community Engagement

N+T Asks: Egleston Square

N+T Asks: Egleston Square

On April 22, 2021, we visited one of Boston’s most vibrant neighborhoods— Egleston Square, and had Now + There’s first ever interpreted N+T Asks! Curator Leah Triplett Harrington is joined by Paloma Valenzuela, Writer/Producer/Director of the web series The Pineapple Diaries; Nakia Hill, Writers' Room Director at 826 Boston, and Writer/Producer; and Denise Delgado, Executive Director of Egleston Square Main Street.

N+T Asks: Roslindale

N+T Asks: Roslindale

Whether you call it “Rozzie,” “Rozzy,” “the ‘Dale,” “the Village,” or something else entirely: we're still stirring up ideas for Roslindale’s future. On March 4, resident ceramicist Ana Crowley Noordzij and local Main Streets Exec. Director Alia Hamada Forrest shone a light on this urban oasis as we wondered: what will Boston be like in 10 years?

N+T Asks: West End

N+T Asks: West End

On February 18, 2020 for Season 3, Episode 2 of N+T Asks, we zoomed in on one of Boston’s most historically notorious, but today, oft-forgotten neighborhoods: the West End. With the help of West End Museum Curator/Board President and Gallery East co-founder, Duane Lucia; third-generation neighborhood resident, Chiara Cherin; and local photographer, Lolita Parker Jr. we discussed the West End’s past, current needs, and possible futures.

N+T Asks: Fort Point

N+T Asks: Fort Point

For the Season 3 premiere of N+T Asks, we zoomed in on Fort Point; with the help of Midway Artist Collective Board of Directors member, Raber Umphenour, and resident multimedia artist, Dorothea Van Camp. There was too much to talk about — from artist housing, to the Boston art market, to the future of Boston artist communities — but we somehow managed to keep it to an hour.

Public Art Champions

Public Art Champions

Leah Triplett Harrington, the engine of our Public Art Accelerator program, introduces the city personnel that are here to help you put up public art in Boston.

Tracing Sari Carel's "The Shape of Play"

Tracing Sari Carel's "The Shape of Play"

Did you know that the first “playground” in the United States was a giant sandbox (called a “sand garden”) in Boston’s North End? Neither did we…until now.