Culture Corridor

The Culture Corridor is a classic arts stroll - full of new surprises!

  1. Begin at the Triennial Hub, home to Julian Charrière’s “Calls for Action”. Here you can grab a physical map, pick up youth and family activities, and chat with a friendly public art ambassador. Don’t forget to browse the limited-edition Triennial merch—perfect for showing off on the rest of your adventure.

  2. From the Hub, wander down Newbury Street, turn onto Boylston, and step inside the Boston Public Library at 700 Boylston. Here you’ll be welcomed by Swoon’s fantastical “In the Well: The Stories We Tell About Addition.”

  3. Then hop on the Green Line at Copley and ride to the Museum of Fine Arts stop. On the Huntington Avenue steps, Alan Michelson’s gleaming “The Knowledge Keepers” awaits.

  4. Continue along Huntington and up to Evans Way Park, where Nicholas Galanin’s dynamic bronze “I think a monument goes like this (pick yourself up)”, Gabriel Sosa’s “I want more celebrations” at SMFA / Tufts University Art Galleries, and Yu-Wen Wu’s “Reigning Beauty” cascading from the Isabella Stewart Gardner will surround you.

  5. Don’t miss the final museum district stop: from Thursday to Sunday, step inside the MassArt Art Museum to see Nicholas Galanin’s striking “Aáni yéi xat duwasáakw (I am called Land)”.

  6. Your stroll still has one more chapter. From the museum district, take a leisurely walk along Ward Street, down Parker, and across Tremont until you reach Roxbury Community College. At the edge of Cedar Street, step inside Building 4, where in a hidden atrium Stephen Hamilton’s “Under the Spider’s Web” and “Oruko Pe: The Names Are Complete” quietly command the space.

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City in Bloom

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Downtown Detour