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David Dearinger presents, “American Neoclassic Sculptors and Their Patrons at Mount Auburn Cemetery, 1820-1870”
Thursday March 1, 2007 at 6:00pm
Boston Public Library, Rabb Lecture Hall
700 Boylston Street
Boston, Massachusetts 02116 Get Directions
Mount Auburn Cemetery
Celebrating 175 Years

What: David Dearinger presents, “American Neoclassic Sculptors and Their Patrons at Mount Auburn Cemetery, 1820-1870”
Where: Rabb Lecture Hall, Boston Public Library, Copley Square, Boston
When: Thursday, March 1, 2007
Time: 6 p.m.
Cost: Free, but please register online at www.mountauburn.org or call 617-607-1995 to RSVP

In honor of the 175th Anniversary of Mount Auburn Cemetery, the nation’s first garden cemetery, David Dearinger, Susan Morse Hilles Curator of Paintings and Sculpture at the Boston Athenaeum, will present a free lecture entitled, “American Neoclassic Sculptors and Their Patrons at Mount Auburn Cemetery, 1820-1870” on Thursday, March 1, 2007 at 6 p.m. at the Rabb Lecture Hall, Boston Public Library in Copley Square.

Mr. Dearinger is an art historian and curator. He has taught art history at Brooklyn College, Hunter College and the Fashion Institute of Technology. Prior to his tenure in Boston, he was the Chief Curator at the National Academy of Design in New York.

Mount Auburn Cemetery is the final resting place of Isabella Stewart Gardner, Anne Whitney, Charles Dana Gibson, Winslow Homer, and Robert Ormerod Preusser, among others. This eclectic combination of artists and their benefactors represents the lifelong aesthetic love affair between the two groups during a period when the cultivation of culture through the arts was seen as a necessity. The collaboration between the patrons and artists is key to the history of Boston and the United States; but it is specifically linked to the planning and enhancement of Mount Auburn Cemetery.

Mount Auburn Cemetery is celebrating its 175th Anniversary with a year of lectures, musical performances, and other events at the Cemetery. This lecture is part Mount Auburn Cemetery’s seven part lecture series “Facets of Mount Auburn: Celebrating 175 Years of a Boston Jewel”, is a fitting event for Mount Auburn Cemetery, which is home to one of the few surviving sculptures by famed sculptor Edmonia Lewis, the first internationally recognized African American sculptor. Her sculpture Hygeia prominently marks the grave of Dr. Harriot Kezia Hunt, the first woman to apply to medical school.

This event is co-sponsored by the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum.

Please call or visit www.mountauburn.org for further information.
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