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50 years later, one museum remembers American veterans imprisoned in Vietnam
And more arts and culture news from in and around Boston. -
$51 million in state money will go to artists, culture groups rebounding from pandemic
The funding is part of the $4 billion in COVID-relief money from the federal government. -
Why the love for romance novels is on the rise, according to their authors
Once known as “bodice rippers,” the romantic novel has gained respect and a growing readership. -
'Hijab Butch Blues' challenges stereotypes and upholds activist self-care
Binaries be damned: What if God is genderless? What if God is trans?In the new memoir Hijab Butch Blues, Lamya H takes what Leslie Feinberg started in… -
The integral role of Black artists in Western art history
Author Zaria Ware illuminates the oft-forgotten stories of Black artists and models in Western art. -
Is it a motorcycle? Or is it art? At Madhouse Motors it's both
Open Studio meets master motorcycle mechanics who also have backgrounds in art and design. -
The Oscars and Tonys still use gendered categories. Should all awards be gender-neutral?
And in New Bedford, a look back at landscape painting in New England. -
Castle of our Skins celebrates a decade of supporting Black music in Boston
The institution's album is titled 'Homage: Chamber Music From Across the African Continent & Diaspora' -
Pharaoh of the opera: Anthony Roth Costanzo discusses his star turn in 'Akhnaten'
Open Studio's Jared Bowen talks opera and the power of pop music with one of its most wide-ranging countertenors. -
How the Brett Kavanaugh hearings inspired 'The Art of Burning,' a new play
Jared Bowen discussed everything from the art of glassblowing to the White Lotus theme song this week on Boston Public Radio.