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Things to Do This Week in Boston
TV people (Don Lemon, Lena Dunham), transcendent art (Xandra Ibarra’s Nude Laughing, Derrick Adams’s View Master) and one 130-year-old marathon.
Keep your weekends full of the coolest things to do around Boston with our weekly Weekender newsletter.

Things to Do this Week in Boston (clockwise from top left): Don Lemon is in conversation with D.L. Hughley at the Shubert Theatre; EDM project Starjunk 95 headlines Royale; comic/actor Rhys Darby headlines the Wilbur; author/showrunner Lena Dunham also headlines the Wilbur; Beauty and the Beast is at the Citizens Opera House; the Boston Marathon takes place on Patriots’ Day / photo via Getty Images.
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MULTIPLE DAYS
Ongoing through April 20 (and Beyond)
PRE-MARATHON FUN
Boston Marathon Fan Fest and Expo
Help manifest good Marathon energy at Fan Fest, with food, live music, workout classes, appearances from pro athletes, and podcast recordings. The Expo, meanwhile, features panels on running with Amby Burfoot, Carrie Tollefson, Mary Ngugi-Cooper, Lisa Weightman, Rob Dalto, and several other notables.
Fan Fest: Free, Friday through Sunday, April 17-19, City Hall Plaza, 1 City Hall Sq., Boston
Expo: Free, Friday through Sunday, April 17-19, Hynes Convention Center, 900 Boylston St., Boston
MUSIC
Boston Symphony Orchestra: Ravel Mother Goose Suite and Rachmaninoff Symphonic Dances
Known for having modelish good looks to match their four-handed piano skills, Dutch brothers Lucas and Arthur Jussen double up for Ravel’s fairy-tale-inspired work and a brand-new commission, Andrew Norman’s Split. Rachmaninof’s final composition completes the program.
$53.99-$173.99, Thursday through Saturday, April 16-18, Symphony Hall, 301 Mass. Ave., Boston
MULTIMEDIA
Boston Turkish Music & Film Festival
This two-month fest, which began with a series of film screenings at the Museum of Fine Arts and Goethe-Institut, has shifted to music. Highlights included the violinist and vocalist Bengisu Gökçe (April 18), jazz pianist Süeda Çatakoğlu (May 15), and a wide-ranging concert from tenor Kenan Oktay and friends (May 22).
Free-$25, through May 22, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston and Goethe-Institut, 170 Beacon St., Boston
THEATER

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Beauty and the Beast
Debuting on Broadway in 1994, just three years after the classic Disney film, Beauty and the Beast recruited original composer Alan Menken and original screenwriter Linda Woolverton to create a faithful adaptation that ran until 2007. This new U.S. tour takes cues from recent British and Australian revivals.
$62.75-$247.05, Tuesday, April 14 through May 2, Citizens Opera House, 539 Washington St., Boston
Gem of the Ocean
Actors’ Shakespeare Project brings us a new version of the chronologically first play in August Wilson’s American Century Cycle. The year is 1904. In Pittsburgh, a 285-year-old woman named Aunt Ester, sends recent arrival Citizen Barlow on a redemptive journey to a place called the City of Bones while local labor conflicts explode in the background.
$25-$96, Thursday, April 16 through May 17, Hibernian Hall, 184 Dudley St., Roxbury
Mariette in Ecstasy
The Treehouse Collective presents a convent drama based on the eponymous novel by Ron Hansen. Mariette, a young postulate, begins having vivid mystical experiences that her community to the point of crisis, not least of all because her experiences are quite unorthodox.
$45-$50.50, through Sunday, April 19, Plaza Black Box Theater, Boston Center for the Arts, 539 Tremont St., Boston
When Playwrights Kill
Matthew Lombardo’s new, Boston-set backstage comedy stars Tony-winners Beth Leavel (The Drowsy Chaperone) and Matt Doyle (Company) in the story of a playwright (Doyle) whose only obstacle to success is the high maintenance actress he’s persuaded to cast (Leavel), who eventually becomes so exasperating that he begins to wonder if murder might be more expedient.
$29-$210.75, through Saturday, April 18, Huntington Theater, 264 Huntington Ave., Boston

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Breaking the Code
MIT’s Catalyst Collaborative presents a biographical drama about the British computer science pioneer Alan Turing, who helped defeat the Nazis in World War II with his code-breaking wizardry, only to find himself shunned by the intelligence apparatus after his homosexuality became public knowledge.
$32-$103, through April 26, Central Square Theater, 450 Mass. Ave., Cambridge
MOVIES

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My Father’s Shadow
Drawn from the memories of writer-director Akinola Davies, Jr. and his brother Wale, My Father’s Shadow transports its audience back to 1993 in Nigeria, where a father, Folarin, takes his two sons on a trip to Lagos at a moment of great political upheaval, during which a chance for democracy slipped through the country’s fingers.
$13-$15, Thursday through Sunday, April 16-19, Brattle Theater, 40 Brattle St., Cambridge
The Christophers
Steven Soderbergh brings us this dark comedy about a once-great but now-inactive painter (Ian McKellen) whose money-hungry children hire an art conservator (Michaela Coel) to pose as an aspiring assistant and retrieve and complete the unfinished work he’s hoarding.
$15.99-$18.48, opens Thursday, April 16, AMC Boston Common, 175 Tremont St., Boston
Normal
Bob Odenkirk stars in this modern Western from director Ben Wheatley (Free Fire, High Rise) as Ulysses, the newly arrived sheriff in a small town called Normal. Initially, the place seems to live up to its name, but a bank robbery opens his eyes to a deep and treacherous rabbit hole of secrets.
$17.49-$19.68, opens Thursday, April 16, Alamo Drafthouse, 60 Seaport Blvd., Boston
The Stranger (2025)
French director François Ozon offers a stylish black-and-white adaptation of Albert Camus’ tale of apathy and absurdity in colonial Algiers. Bureaucrat Mersault (Benjamin Voisin) has a relaxed but dull life until his mother’s death (and his apparent indifference toward it) heralds a bizarre chain of events that draws him toward an unenviable fate.
$15-$19.75, opens Friday, April 17, Coolidge Corner Theater, 290 Harvard St., Brookline
Hamlet (2025)
The deep psychological roots of Shakespeare’s most famous tragedy have made it endlessly adaptable to different times, places, and groups, as shown yet again by this latest version from Aneil Karia, taking place in London’s present-day South Asian community. Riz Ahmed stars as the all-too-pensive prince.
$15-$19.75, Coolidge Corner Theater, 290 Harvard St., Brookline
Exit 8
One man is just trying to get out of a subway station in this psychological horror import from Japan—but, perhaps needless to say, this is no ordinary subway station. There’s only one way out—Exit 8—and along the way he must avoid “anomalies,” which can subtle or frightening, and deal with the other souls who walk these weird corridors.
$15.99-$18.48, opens AMC Boston Common, 175 Tremont St., Boston
You, Me & Tuscany
Halle Bailey, star of Disney’s live action remake of The Little Mermaid, takes female lead opposite Regé-Jean Page (Bridgerton, Black Bag) in this rom-com about a woman whose whimsical quarter life crisis trip to Italy doesn’t turn out quite how she expected—but that isn’t exactly a bad thing.
$13.99-$19.68, Alamo Drafthouse, 60 Seaport Blvd., Boston
The Drama
In this Boston-based dark comedy from director Kristoffer Borgli, Zendaya and Robert Pattinson play a couple who are thrilled to be engaged until the bride-to-be confesses to a scandalous act in her past just a week before the wedding, cracking the foundation of trust between them.
$15-$19.75, Coolidge Corner Theater, 290 Harvard St., Brookline
Wicked Queer
One of the world’s oldest LGBTQIA+ film festivals returns with highlights including Louise Weard’s hours-long transgender epic Castration Movie (April 12).
$15-$19.75 (per screening), through Thursday ,April 16, various venues, Boston, Brookline, and Cambridge
The Super Mario Galaxy Movie
The diverse settings and anti-gravity fun of the Wii classic Super Mario Galaxy serve as a perfect anchor for the sequel to 2023’s colorful, star-studded The Super Mario Bros. Movie. Benny Safdie, Donald Glover, Issa Rae, Luis Guzmán, and Brie Larson have joined the voice cast for this outing, which finds Mario (Christ Pratt) and Luigi (Charlie Day) fighting Bowser (Jack Black) again—this time in space.
$13.99-$25.98, AMC Boston Common, 175 Tremont St., Boston
Project Hail Mary
Ryan Gosling stars in this adaptation of Andy Weir’s eponymous novel. Like its predecessor, The Martian (also adapted to film), Project Hail Mary tells the story of a lone astronaut, this time tasked with figuring out why the sun appears to be burning out. To get to the bottom of the issue, he’ll have to team up with oddly cute extraterrestrial named Rocky.
$14.50-$19.25, Landmark Kendall Square Cinema, 355 Binney St., Boston
Reminders of Him
Colleen Hoover’s hit romance manifests on the big screen with Maika Monroe (The Hand That Rocks the Cradle, Longlegs) as Kenna, back in her hometown after a seven-year incarceration. Barred from interacting with her daughter, she finds solace in a burgeoning relationship with an ex-NFL player named Ledger (Tyriq Withers)—but not without its own complications.
$13.99-$23.68, Alamo Drafthouse, 60 Seaport Blvd., Boston
ALSO
- Top 50 Restaurants in Boston
- The Best Restaurants in Boston’s North End
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TUESDAY (4/14/26)
MUSIC
The Red Pears and Together Pangea
Of these two great SoCal garage bands, Together Pangea has a longer history, forming in 2008, just in time to become a key band in the lo-fi slacker rock era that included acts like Wavves, Ty Segall, and the Black Lips. The Red Pears came on the scene in 2015 and continue to resemble a sludgier, more stoned version of the early Strokes.
$38, 7 p.m., Brighton Music Hall, 158 Brighton Ave., Allston
WEDNESDAY (4/15/26)
MUSIC
Oh Wonder
English musician Josephine Vander Gucht was about to switch to her fallback plans—becoming a lawyer—when she met future husband Anthony West, leading a fruitful pop collaboration that has successfully kept law school at bay. Their 2015 self-titled debut remains their most popular album; last year, they recorded a new, higher-fidelity version.
$39.50-$87.70, 7:30 p.m., Boch Center Shubert Theater, 265 Tremont St., Boston
BOOKS + READINGS
Jeffrey Marlow
Star Trek famously declared space to be the final frontier, but the deepest depths of our own oceans are still mostly unexplored—and what little we do know can make it sound like another planet indeed. In his new book The Dark Frontier, Boston University biology professor Jeffrey Marlow gives his reader a thorough rundown.
Free (admission only) or $36.69 (book included), 6 p.m., Harvard Science Center, 1 Oxford St., Cambridge
THURSDAY (4/16/26)
MUSIC
Lil Mosey
Raised in Seattle, rapper Lil Mosey dropped out of high school and high tailed it to Los Angeles to capitalize on popularity of his 2017 track “Pull Up.” He made the right call, because his biggest hit was yet to come—his criminally catchy party track “Blueberry Faygo” has racked up nearly 1.5 billion Spotify plays to date.
$25, 9 p.m., Big Night Live, 110 Causeway St., Boston
COMEDY
Herman Wrice
A co-host of web series The Kevin Langue Show, Herman Wrice journeyed, much like the Fresh Prince, from West Philadelphia to Los Angeles long ago. These days, he’s one of the proudest representatives of bald manhood this side of Larry David—even if his advice may be hard to hear.
$36.59, 7 p.m., Laugh Boston, 425 Summer St., Boston
ART
Xandra Ibarra: Nude Laughing
What does marginalization feel like? For performance artist Xandra Ibarra, it creates a “vexed relation” to living in one’s own skin that she conveys through mad laughter alongside the act of filling a “nylon cocoon” with “white lady accoutrements” including blonde hair, ballet shoes, and pearls, breaking through the formalities of conventional discourse to deliver something stranger and perhaps more affecting.
Free with $30 general admission, 8 p.m., Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston
BOOKS + READINGS
Lena Dunham
After the end of her HBO series Girls in 2017, Lena Dunham kept a relatively low profile, preferring to be behind the camera instead of in front of it. With that trademark Dunham candor, Famesick, her first book since 2019, delves into some of the reasons for this shift and a lot else besides.
$61, 7:30 p.m., The Wilbur, 246 Tremont St., Boston
FRIDAY (4/17/26)
MUSIC
Field Medic
Blessed with a classicist songwriting talent and an impressive amount of hair on his head, Kevin Patrick Sullivan calls his sound “freak folk” on his Bandcamp page, but there’s not much of the eccentricity of the original freak folk acts to be found on his latest album, 2025’s Surrender Instead—just a pleasant collection of heartfelt, refreshingly guileless tunes.
$36, 8 p.m., Brighton Music Hall, 158 Brighton Ave., Boston
Starjunk 95
Portrayed as an “intergalactic radio station” with a fictional crew similar to the cartoon members of Gorillaz, EDM project Starjunk 95 is an irresistibly funky manifestation of the Internet’s collective obsession with Japanese pop culture—or perhaps just the point where video game soundtracks no longer require video games.
$25-$35.74, 7 p.m., Royale, 279 Tremont St., Boston
Krooked Kings
A dialed-in alt rock band composed of a bunch of LDS dropouts from Salt Lake City, Krooked Kings mix moody atmospheres with hooky accessibility, maintaining a fluid but reliably identifiable sound with elements of power pop, post-punk, and adult contemporary. They released their fourth album, In Another Life, at the end of March.
$22.50-$32.95, 8 p.m., The Sinclair, 52 Church St., Cambridge
TALKS
Don Lemon and D.L. Hughley
The former CNN anchor sits down with one of the Original Kings of Comedy for a wide-ranging discussion. Remembered by many as a TV sitcom dad, Hughley is also a vociferous political commentator whose first book was entitled I Want You to Shut the F#ck Up: How the Audacity of Dopes Is Ruining America. Lemon, meanwhile, made the news himself this year for a high-profile arrest at a Minneapolis ICE protest.
$39-$194.20, 7:30 p.m., Boch Center Shubert Theater, 265 Tremont St., Boston
ALSO
Red Sox vs Detroit Tigers at Fenway Park, 7:15pm
SATURDAY (4/18/26)
FESTIVALS
Thai Market Songkran Festival
Celebrating the Thai New Year, this fest offers street food like pad kee mao, artisan vendors, live performances including dances and martial arts demos, a Thai costume contest, and a space for the holiday’s signature water fights.
Free, 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Brattle Square, 1 Brattle Sq., Cambridge
MUSIC
Paul Lewis
The great classical pianist fills in for an injured Joyce Yang with works from Debussy, Poulenc, and Mozart, including the Austrian genius’ Sonata in C Major, reputedly a favorite of Einstein. Lewis has recently been working through such deeper Mozart cuts in performances informed by the subsequent composers they influenced.
$56-$84, 8 p.m., Jordan Hall, New England Conservatory, 30 Gainsborough St., Boston
Concrete Boys
Founded and led by their most famous member, Lil Yachty, this Atlanta rap collective also includes Draft Day, Camo!, Dc2Trill, Honest, and recent addition Rio Amor. Their new mixtape, It’s Us Vol. 2, is their first statement since the messy exit of former member Karrahbooo—but fans expecting any in-song commentary on that drama will have to keep waiting.
$36, 8 p.m., Paradise Rock Club, 967 Comm. Ave., Boston
The Maine
Emerging from Tempe, Arizona in the late 2000s, The Maine charted a path out of the emo trappings that characterized their debut, Can’t Stop Won’t Stop, developing a country-inflected alt rock sound while maintaining their big, anthemic qualities. Joy Next Door, released last Friday, is the 10th album.
$28-$217.57, 6:30 p.m., Citizens House of Blues, 15 Lansdowne St., Boston
COMEDY
Josh Day
“I am a human trying to survive and I tell jokes,” says local comic Josh Day in his to-the-point bio. On stage, he has the appearance of an oddly well-quaffed mountain man and a refined talent for elder millennial snark: “I like to make snow angels,” he says in this 2024 clip. “Is that what you call it when you run someone over in a blizzard?”
$28.52, 8 p.m., Democracy Brewing, 35 Temple Pl., Boston
DANCE
Chavi Bansal’s Vimoksha Dance Company
Choreographer Chavi Bansal fuses Indian and Western tradition in her works, three of which you’ll see here. Touched by Water wrestles with India’s gender gap; Salt Soaked focuses on immigration stories; the untitled third piece takes inspiration from Moksha Patam, the medieval spiritual board game that eventually became Chutes and Ladders.
$47, 8 p.m., Institute of Contemporary Art, 25 Harbor Shore Dr., Boston
OUTDOORS
Pedal The Necklace: Franklin Park to Jamaica Pond
Do you have a bike you’re always telling yourself you should ride more? Here’s your excuse. The three-part Pedal the Necklace group ride takes participants along the Emerald Necklace from Franklin Park to Boston Common. This Saturday is the first leg, with the second and third on May 2 and 9.
|Free, 10 a.m., meets at Seaver Street Bluebike Station, Franklin Park, corner of Seaver St. and Humboldt Ave. Roxbury
SUNDAY (4/19/26)

A scene from Wild Kratts Live 2.0: Activate Creature Power! / Photo by Chris Ocken/Ocken Photography
FAMILY
Wild Kratts Live 2.0: Activate Creature Power
Just in time for April vacation, brothers Chris and Martin Kratt are bringing a live-action stage version of their beloved PBS Kids show, Wild Kratts, to the Wang Theatre. Expect wacky fun and fascinating facts about the animal kingdom. Little ones will love it—and you might learn something, too. —MATTHEW REED BAKER
$30-$88, 1 p.m. and 5 p.m., Boch Center Wang Theatre, 270 Tremont St, Boston
MUSIC
Lenka
Regattabar is usually a jazz venue, but on Sunday it hosts this Australian singer-songwriter and actor best known for her breezy 2008 pop earworm “The Show.” Her seventh album, Good Days, drops May 29. Its teaser track, “Sunshine Girl,” weds melancholy lyrics to a deceptively pleasant tune that’s every bit as charming as its now 18-year-old cousin.
$41.79, 6:30 p.m., Regattabar, 1 Bennett St., Cambridge
Yagódy
This Ukrainian folk pop quartet’s mission, in the wake of Russia’s ongoing invasion of their homeland, is inevitably political as well as musical. With their Eurovision-style energy, close harmonies, and darkly beautiful melodies, they put on quite the show, as evidenced by this stirring KEXP session, recorded in January.
$38.85, 7:30 p.m., Crystal Ballroom, 55 Davis Sq., Somerville
COMEDY
Rhys Darby: The Legend Returns
First introduced to Americans as Murray, the hapless manager on the 2000s musical comedy series Flight of the Conchords, Rhys Darby landed another high-profile role this decade as the foppish pirate Stede Bonnet on Our Flag Means Death. The New Zealander’s roots, however, are in standup, to which he recently returned after a break of several years.
$37.75-$50.75, 7 p.m., The Wilbur, 246 Tremont St., Boston
Susan Rice
Active since the ’80s, Susan Rice has performed with Paula Poundstone, Jerry Seinfeld, Bill Hicks, and Sam Kinison, but she remained fairly obscure until her fantastic 2024 Don’t Tell Comedy set Funny Old Bag, featuring such classic one liners as “I got bad knees—it was a speed dating accident,” became one of the most channel’s most viral videos.
$39.90, 7 p.m., Laugh Boston, 425 Summer St., Boston
CIRCUS
Cirque Us Annual Benefit Show
Cirque Us pulls out all the stops for their 2026 fundraiser, with two shows featuring two different sets of guests from around the United States: Flying Gravity Circus, Francesca Bonfiglio, Gwynnethe Glickman, Connor Jocktober, Faith Elizabeth, and Maia Castro Santos at 3 p.m. and InFlyte Entertainment, Judy Epstein, Marissa Schaffer, Amelia Mchugh, Mariah Fraker, Jasper Mayone, Ian Kent, and Maya Zuckerman at 6 p.m.
$26.50-$52, 3 p.m. and 6 p.m., Arts at the Armory, 191 Highland Ave., Somerville
MONDAY (4/20/26)
SPORTS
The Boston Marathon
Boston’s marathon isn’t just any marathon—it’s the world’s oldest, going back 130 years. You can watch the action at several places along the route from Hopkinton to Copley Square. There’s also a livestream at the ticketed Mile 27 at City Hall Plaza, where you can grab a beer and enjoy a post-race party with live music from COUCH.
Free, 9 a.m.-5:30 p.m., various locations, Boston area
MUSIC
The Antlers
Named for a Microphones song, this Brooklyn duo—singer, songwriter, and multi-instrumentalist Peter Silberman and drummer Michael Learner—saw their biggest reach in the early 2010s. Their third album, 2009’s alternately noisy and dreamy Hospice, is still their most popular; they recently released a live version.
$36, 7 p.m., Brighton Music Hall, 158 Brighton Ave., Allston
Ongoing
SHOPPING
Somerville Winter Farmers Market
With many outdoor farmers markets in hibernation, this weekly indoor market, with more than 65 vendors offering produce, dairy, meat, pastries, coffee, specialty items, and more, is an excellent cold weather alternative.
Free, Saturdays through April 11, Arts at the Armory, 191 Highland Ave., Somerville
ATTRACTIONS

Photo by Rainer Christian Kurzeder
Dino Safari
Dinosaur-obsessed kids will flip for this walk-through exhibit featuring more than 50 life-sized, scientifically accurate animatronic creatures of the distant past, from the sleek hunter Velociraptor to the perennial crowd favorite, Tyrannosaurus rex. They’ll also find a simulated fossil dig, a scavenger hunt, virtual reality elements, and more edutaining fun.
$20.50-$26.50, open Wednesday through Sunday, CambridgeSide, 119 First St., Cambridge

Sloomoo’s Slime Wall. / Courtesy
SlooMoo MiniMoo
If you’re looking for something unique for the kids on a weekend or vacation day, consider this tactile workshop, where they can make and customize their own “slime” with scents, textures, color, and charms, play games with the stuff, and enjoy other fun sensory experiences. See more here.
$23.99, open daily, Faneuil Hall Marketplace, South Market Bldg., Unit 43-44, Boston

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Activate
Billed as “the world’s first active gaming facility,” Activate drops you and your friends in a real-life video game, employing interactive technology to usher players through a varied series of physical and mental challenges.
$24.99-$39.99, open daily, 20 District Ave., Dorchester
Putt Across America
If you’ve ever visited Faneuil Hall Marketplace and thought, “What this place needs is a mini golf course,” your prayers have been answered. Familiar American landmarks dot the 18 holes, making for plenty of fun photo ops.
$25, open daily, 10 a.m.-10 p.m., Faneuil Hall Marketplace, 4 S Market St., Boston

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Museum of Ice Cream
Yes, you can eat as much ice cream as you want at the Museum of Ice Cream, but there’s a lot more to this escapist wonderland, billed as “a place free from distractions, expectations, and inhibitions.” There are several colorful, slightly surreal spaces to explore at your leisure, including the Diner, Creamliner (an imaginary airplane interior), Hall of Freezers, Carnival, and Sprinkle Pool.
$25-$51, 121 Seaport Blvd., Boston
Museum of Illusions
Experience the delights of confusing your brain at this new downtown attraction, featuring a set of images, installations, and “illusion rooms” designed to make reality feel a little less normal—and to provide some fun and crazy photo ops for the Gram.
$38, 200 State St., Boston
View Boston
If you’ve got visitors and you want to give them a killer 360-degree view of the city, or if you just want a peep yourself, you can hardly do better than View Boston, at the top of the Prudential Center. You can spring for a guided tour or just take it in yourself. The view isn’t all you’ll find up there—there’s also a restaurant, The Beacon, and Stratus, a cocktail bar, which is decked out for the holidays. Higher-level ticket packages include a sample drink.
$29.99-59.99, open daily, 10 a.m.-10 p.m., Prudential Center, 800 Boylston St., Boston
The Innovation Trail
This tour focuses not on colonial and revolutionary Boston—that’s been thoroughly covered—but on the city’s history, down to the present, as a hub of science, medicine, and technology. You can arrange for a private tour via an online form or opt for a self-guided experience whenever you want.
Free (self-guided), starts in Central Square, Cambridge or Downtown Crossing, Boston
WNDR Museum
This gallery space in Downtown Crossing features iconic Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama’s Let’s Survive Forever and more than 20 other immersive installations, including The Wisdom Project, where visitors can add their own response to the question “What do you know for sure?,” and WNDR’s signature Light Floor, which changes in response to visitors’ movement.
$32-$38, 500 Washington St., Boston
ART + EXHIBITIONS (Ongoing)

View Master (2025) by Derrick Adams, the titular artwork in his exhibition at the ICA. / Derrick Adams, View Master, 2025. Acrylic and fabric collage on wood panel. Courtesy of the artist and Gagosian. © Derrick Adams.
Derrick Adams: View Master
Dedicated to a celebration of, in his words, “Black people — not entertaining, just being, living,” NYC artist Derrick Adams utilizes a wide range of media to make theeveryday iconic. View Master is the first exhibition to provide a mid-career survey of his bold, idiosyncratic, character-rich work.
$20, Thursday, April 16 through September 7, Institute of Contemporary Art, 25 Harbor Shore Dr., Boston
Attaché: An ASB Group Show
The Boston Center for the Arts casts a spotlight on 30 of its Artist Studio Building occupants. With so many artists in various media, commonalities can be difficult to find, but curator Meclina Gomes notes how their practices “are shaped by inherited culture, migration, and lived lineage” and how their work functions in “carrying memory, tradition, and embodied knowledge from one context into another.”
Free, through July 11, Mills Gallery, Boston Center for the Arts, 551 Tremont St., Boston
Performing Conditions: Artistic Labor and Dependency as Form
Most artists don’t want to have to think too much about business—it’s usually not particularly inspiring—but it can’t be avoided. The artists in this group show are all facing the demons of labor, debt, and the general dependence of art on factors outside it—historical, social, economic, etc.
Free, through August 2, MIT List Visual Arts Center, 20 Ames St., Bldg. E15-109, Cambridge
Subvert, Repair, Reclaim: Contemporary Artists Take Back the Nude
From ancient Greco-Roman sculpture to Picasso’s radical Les Demoiselles d’Avignon, nudes have been a constant presence in Western art, very often fraught, especially when it comes to female nudes, with questions of power and objectification. This show brings together 12 contemporary artists wrestling with these questions as they carry on and complicate the grand tradition.
$30, through August 2, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston
Fazendo a América: Rosângela Rennó and Histories of Memory and Migration in Brazil
It’s been almost three decades since Brazilian artist Rosângela Rennó has seen a solo exhibition in the United States. These six relatively recent immersive installations, made from personal, public, and anonymous photographs, address the ways collective memory is constructed and erased by the powerful, and the power of art to reassert what some have tried to make us forget.
$30, through August 2, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston
Unbraid: Hair, Clay, and Craft
Three artists, Adebunmi Gbadebo, Jennifer Ling Datchuk, and Sonya Clark, explore the meaning of hair in their respective personal cultural histories, the first two through ceramics and the third through lithography. A notion of hair emerges as a foundational human artistic medium—“the fiber that we grow,” as Clark puts it.
$30, through July 26, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston
Framing Nature: Gardens and Imagination
A well-maintained garden is a pretty thing, but also, as a celebration of natural beauty that is decidedly unnatural, a paradoxical thing. This spring, the Museum of Fine Arts is reveling in that tension with a themed exhibition exploring the diverse meaning and uses of gardens in art from around the world and across history.
$30, through June 28, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston
Split | Second
Our experience of time is defined largely by the ways we measure it, from stargazing to ancient sundials to atomic clocks. The MIT Museum explores our relationship with this strangest of phenomena through items from its own collection as well as Jonathon Keats’ piece New England River Time, which measures time by the movement of five local rivers.
$20, through January 4, 2027, MIT Museum, 314 Main St., Building E-28, Cambridge
Freezing Time: Edgerton and the Beauty of the Machine Age
Explore the legacy of 20th century MIT scientist Harold ”Doc” Edgerton, whose photographic techniques, rooted in antiquated technology and updated for the 1930s, revolutionized the study of high-speed movement. Edgerton was as much artist as scientist, impressing with his pictures enough to be included in the Museum of Modern Art’s first-ever photo exhibition.
$20, through October 8, MIT Museum, 314 Main St., Building E-28, Cambridge
Celtic Art Across the Ages
“Celtic” is a slippery term in history, with scholars arguing to various ends about what cultures, past and present, can be meaningfully considered Celtic. Featuring artifacts stretching back to 800 BCE, this exhibition aims not so much to settle the debate as to highlight the creative diversity and achievements in craftsmanship that fall under the term’s umbrella.
Free, through August 2, Harvard Art Museums, 32 Quincy St., Cambridge
Imagined Nation
The Boston Athenaeum celebrates the United States Semiquincentennial by sharing a few of its holdings from George Washington’s library, including his copies of Common Sense and other pamphlets reflecting his engagement with the political discourses of his time. The exhibit also features other fascinating historical documents; it will be rotated with new content later this year.
$11, through November 14, Boston Athenaeum, 10½ Beacon St., Boston

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Discovering King Tut’s Tomb
Archaeologist Howard Carter’s 1922 discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb was a boon to Egyptology that continues to fire the popular imagination. In this interactive show, you’ll relive the iconic moment through virtual reality, learn about the art of mummification, and check out meticulously handcrafted replicas of artifacts associated with the Boy King.
$34.50-$37.50, The Saunders Castle at Park Plaza, 130 Columbus Ave., Boston
Kelly Taylor Mitchell: mouth wide open
mouth wide open takes inspiration from Kelly Taylor Mitchell’s trips to the Bahia region of Brazil, where much of the population is descended from enslaved people who freed themselves. The works here are in conversation with the syncretic spiritual practices, rituals, and objects of this population, but “their true activation,” visitors are told, “only occurs in private.”
$30, through April 26, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston
Persona: Photography and the Re-Imagined Self
The Gardner Museum explores the power of photography to help us imagine ourselves in new ways, gathering more than 80 works in which artists play with time, gender, mythology, and reflection, addressing broader social concerns and questions of reality itself through the individual act of transformation.
$22, through May 10, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, 25 Evans Way, Boston
The Road to Revolution: Massachusetts and the Independence Movement
Every student of American history learns that Boston was home to some of the most radical activity in the American Revolution, but it was also home to some its most vociferous debate. This exhibition takes a closer look with artifacts including an original broadside print of the Declaration of Independence, battlefield remnants, letters, and personal possessions.
$15, through January 3, 2027, Old State House, 206 Washington St., Boston
Say It Loud: AAMARP, 1977 to Now
Since 1977, Northeastern University’s African American Master Artists-in-Residence Program has provided space and support for Black artists and served as a crucial hub for the wider artistic community. This show features 60 works made or made or shown by nearly 40 different artists during their stints in the program.
$20, through August 2, Institute of Contemporary Art, 25 Harbor Shore Dr., Boston
Music America: Iconic Objects from America’s Music History
The title says it all: you’ll see 100 artifacts containing the story of American music, from anonymous objects like a Civil War bugle to celebrity possessions like Jimi Hendrix’s guitar and Chuck D’s lyric sheet for “Fight the Power.” Note: apart from exhibit hours, there are three other ways to see the exhibition, each with different pricing—check the link for full details.
$17.40 (exhibit hours admission), through July 7, Boch Center Wang Theater, 270 Tremont St., Boston
Edmonia Lewis: Said in Stone
Of mixed Black and indigenous heritage, master 19th century marble sculptor Edmonia Lewis broke multiple barriers, winning the respect of her American artist peers but remaining underexamined until the end of the 20th century, when renewed scholarly interest and the rediscovery of some of her lost works prompted a long-overdue canonization. This major exhibition gathers 115 of her works.
$25, through June 7, Peabody Essex Museum, 161 Essex St., Salem
Davis Museum Modern and Contemporary Galleries
Closed for many years, the Modern and Contemporary Galleries at Wellesley’s art museum are back and fully reinstalled with works from prominent figures like Willem de Kooning, Lee Krasner, Daniela Rivera, Horace Pippin, and others, including some pieces from the Davis’ collection that have never been displayed.
Free, Davis Museum, Wellesley College, 106 Central Street, Wellesley
Divine Color: Hindu Prints from Modern Bengal
The Museum of Fine Arts casts a spotlight on the popular art of 19th century Hindu devotional lithographs. While they’re sometimes derided as kitsch, much like their Catholic counterparts in the West, the cultural influence of these mass-produced works speaks for itself, showing the power of technological changes to influence religious practice and cultural identity.
$30, through May 31, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston

Masako Miki: Midnight March, when it was installed at the Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco / Photo by Nicholas Lea Bruno
Masako Miki: Midnight March
Masako Miki’s boldly colored felt sculptures have both a formal elegance and a whimsical quality. If they seem to have personalities, that’s intentional—they’re partly inspired by yōkai, supernatural entities of Japanese folklore, but Miki intends for them to represent a new mythology all her own.
Free, through May 31, MassArt Art Museum, 621 Huntington Ave., Boston
Collaborating in Conflict: The Yeats Family and the Public Arts
Canonical 20th century Irish poet William Butler Yeats is the most famous member of his immediate family, but genius doesn’t happen in a vacuum—the whole Yeats family made art, often working with and influencing one another. Bringing together a wide variety of art and artifacts, this exhibition tells their story.
Free, through May 31, McMullen Museum of Art, Boston College, 2101 Comm. Ave., Brighton
Critical Printing
Harvard Art Museums describes this exhibition as “designed to generate experimental thinking.” Paired, like all installations in the institution’s Teaching Gallery, with a Harvard course, it juxtaposes a wildly diverse set of prints from around the world and across history, some abstract, some realistic, showcasing the various techniques and infinite possibilities of the medium.
Free, through May 10, Harvard Art Museums, 32 Quincy St., Cambridge
To My Best Friend
Lasting for nearly the whole of 2026, To My Best Friend celebrates the contributions of Fotene Demoulas and Tom Coté to the Institute of Contemporary Art’s collection, highlighting their focus on women and other historically underrepresented artists. The 50-plus selection includes works from Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Olga de Amaral, Sarah Sze, and many others.
$20, through December 31, Institute of Contemporary Art, 25 Harbor Shore Dr., Boston
Press & Pull: Two Decades at the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop
Coming of age during the Harlem Renaissance, printmaker Robert Blackburn helped to continue the movement’s legacy in 1947 by founding his Printmaking Workshop, which held classes and provided working space for artists. This exhibition brings together work from artists associated with the Workshop, a successor of which still operates today.
Free, through May 31, MassArt Art Museum, 621 Huntington Ave., Boston
AI: Mind the Gap
As AI continues to insinuate itself into seemingly every corner of social and economic life, this MIT Museum exhibit becomes more and more relevant. Noting that the technology “often reveals more about human intelligence than machines themselves,” the show draws on the work of experts like Claude Shannon and Seymour Papert to explore AI’s promise and dangers across a variety of applications.
$20, ongoing, MIT Museum, 314 Main St., Building E-28, Cambridge
Reality and Imagination: Rembrandt and the Jews in the Dutch Republic
The Museum of Fine Arts’ Center for Netherlandish Art collaborated with Boston University graduate students on this examination of Rembrandt’s relationship with the Jewish community in Amsterdam. The artist was no alien to this community—he lived in the city’s Jewish Quarter for much of his life.
$30, through December 1, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston

Unidentified artist, bed cover (detail), Chinese, about 1970s. Cotton and synthetics, hand-sewn patchwork. Joel Alvord and Lisa Schmid Alvord Fund. / Courtesy MFA Boston
One Hundred Stitches, One Hundred Villages: The Beauty of Patchwork from Rural China
In villages across China, a tradition of patchwork, developed from the clothes of monks, carries on unbroken from scarcely remembered times. Used as curtains, clothing, and bedspreads, these eye-bewitching creations are marked by individual improvisation as much as adherence to established technique.
$30, through May 3, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston
Lighten Up! On Biology and Time
A roster of 15 artists—including Carsten Höller, Adam Haar Horowitz, Seth Riskin, James Carpenter, Liliane Lijn, and Helga Schmid—explore the relationship of life to the cycles of day and night through immersive art, installations, and experiential environments, touching on circadian rhythms, alternative concepts of time, and the mysteries of dreaming.
$20, through August 31, MIT Museum, 314 Main St., Building E-28, Cambridge
Faces in the Crowd: Street Photography
Offering a slice of the immediacy of everyday life and society, street photography has an irresistible power of fascination. Connecting the work of legends like Garry Winogrand with that of contemporary practitioners like Katy Grannan, Faces in the Crowd hops around the globe and through five decades to explore this genre of otherness in the age of the selfie.
$30, through July 13, Museum of Fine Arts, 465 Huntington Ave., Boston
Knowing Nature: Stories of the Boreal Forest
The Peabody Essex Museum casts a spotlight on one of Earth’s largest biome, which stretches nearly all the way around the world, from Canada through Siberia and into Scandinavia. You’ll learn about the region’s significance and diversity through personal testimonies, commissioned objects, photos and video, and interactive areas.
$25, through September 27, Peabody Essex Museum, 161 Essex St., Salem
Sea Monsters: Wonders of Nature and Imagination
Using historic illustrations, maps, artifacts, and specimens, this exhibition explores the exotic marine beasts cooked up in the dreams of sailors and bards down the centuries, as well as the real-life creatures, like the giant squid, whose scarcely believable existence inspired many of these legends.
$15, through June 26, Harvard Museum of Natural History, 26 Oxford St., Cambridge
The Salem Witch Trials 1692
Even when the story of the Salem Witch Trials is told with accuracy, the distance of centuries can make it hard to imagine. With this ongoing exhibition, the Peabody Essex Museum tries to close that gap a bit, bringing the timeline and context of the infamous miscarriage of justice to life through original documents and artifacts.
$25, ongoing, Peabody Essex Museum, 161 Essex St., Salem