Upcoming Art Exhibits and Craft Sales
Be sure to confirm via registration link before committing to attend.

A Shared Legacy: Gifts from the Robyn and John Horn Collection

Fuller Craft Museum’s 2025 Members’ Biennial: Town and Country

Small Wonders: Beauty, Alchemy, and the Art of Enameling

Chelmsford Arts Center - An Artist's Journey (works of Kate Crawford)
The Gallery at the CCA presents 5-6 curated exhibitions each season, September through June.

Taxonomies of the Ordinary
Taxonomies of the Ordinary
In this two-person exhibition, artists Bo Kim and Hayle Lovstedt explore themes of perception, relationship, and vulnerability in artwork that is interconnected yet aesthetically different.
Bo Kim’s paintings of ornithological specimens merge the precision of a scientist with the sensitivity of an artist. By re-presenting natural science collections through a careful and observant lens, Kim highlights the artist’s role as both interpreter and advocate for social and environmental awareness. Her work challenges conventional systems of categorization and perception, encouraging viewers to reconsider the assumptions that shape our understanding of nature and one another. Lovstedt’s “hostile” and “inconvenient” objects confront us with their subversion of functionality in their everyday uses. A serving bowl with spikes or a multi-handled mug gives us pause and invites us to make space for the unspoken tension that may be present at the dinner table.
Together, these disparate bodies of work begin a larger interwoven conversation about the everyday and how false perceptions can embed trauma. What are the implications of our disregard? Who decides what’s worthy of attention and why does their voice carry such weight? How can we begin to shift our perspective? When are we allowed to take up space—and when do we simply take it?

Concord Art Association Exhibitions
We are between shows. Check back soon for our current exhibitions

26th Annual Frances N. Roddy Exhibition
26th Annual Frances N. Roddy Exhibition

Lee Mingwei: Our Peaceable Kingdom
Lee Mingwei: Our Peaceable Kingdom
The resonance between Hicks’ Quaker vision of peace and the questions I was asking in my own work felt urgent. What does peace look like today? Can it be plural, tender, even contradictory? Hicks’ Peaceable Kingdom offered not a conclusion, but a quiet proposition: that peace is not agreement, but the radical act of coexisting with difference.
—Lee Mingwei
Lee Mingwei’s ongoing collaborative artwork, Our Peaceable Kingdom, began in part with a 2018 visit to the Worcester Art Museum, where he encountered a painting by American folk artist Edward Hicks (c. 1833). Captivated by Hicks’ Quaker vision of peace, Lee invited artists to respond to and reinterpret this iconic painting, considering the enduring question, “What is peace?”