
ATTACHÉ: AN ARTIST STUDIOS BUILDING GROUP SHOW
Beatriz Whitehill, Bell Beecher Pitkin, Don Claude, Emily Rose Navarro, Feda Eid, Frantz Lexy, Georgina Lewis, Heather (Hey There) Kapplow, Homa Sarabi, Ifé Franklin, Isaac Zerkle, Jose Cotto, Lilan Yang, Maria Molteni, Mark Hernandez Motaghy, Marla L. McLeod, Miguel Caba, Navid Haghighi, Ng'endo Mukii, Ngoc-Tran Vu, nicola, Rani Sarin, Selina Narovlansky, Shima Taj Bakhsh, IMAGINE aka Sneha Shrestha, Xray Aims, Yolanda He Yang, Yuko Okabe, Meclina Gomes
Boston Center for the Arts
539 Tremont Street, Boston, MA 02116
Admission
Free Admission
About
For the first time in several years, the Boston Center for the Arts is highlighting artists from its Artist Studio Building with a group exhibition open to the public. Experience work created by the artists who reside behind our walls, and meet the individuals who are vital not only to our campus, but to the Boston arts community. Attaché, curated by Meclina Gomes, is a group exhibition that brings together artists whose contemporary practices are shaped by inherited culture, migration, and lived lineage. Each artist functions as a cultural attaché—carrying memory, tradition, and embodied knowledge from one context into another. Their work reflects how origin informs identity and how culture is activated, translated, and reimagined through material, process, and form. Positioned within Mills Gallery’s commitment to artist-driven inquiry, the exhibition frames creative practice as legacy work: a deliberate laying of bricks that honors the past while shaping what is carried forward. From curator Meclina Gomes: “My curatorial approach is informed by my own storytelling-based art practice, which centers cultural memory, personal narrative, and intergenerational continuity. This approach aligns with Mills Gallery’s focus on dialogue, experimentation, and process-based work. Through this lens, Attaché becomes a connective space where individual histories remain distinct yet interwoven, revealing shared practices of care, stewardship, and cultural responsibility. The exhibition invites viewers to consider how contemporary artists hold, translate, and extend legacy within an evolving cultural landscape.”