June 22–October 12, 2021

Garden for Boston

Between May and September, artists and activists Ekua Holmes (African American, b. 1955) and Elizabeth James-Perry (Aquinnah Wampanoag, b. 1973) will create a “Garden for Boston” outside the MFA’s main entrance. The two installations that comprise this exhibition, in dialogue with each other and the surrounding space, reshape the grounds around Cyrus Dallin’s monumental bronze sculpture Appeal to the Great Spirit (1909) with sunflowers and corn—ephemeral plants that are nonetheless part of the endless cycles of nature and long histories of New England land.

Working with United Neighbors of Lower Roxbury Community Gardens, Holmes will plant some three thousand sunflowers for Radiant Community. An extension of her ongoing “Roxbury Sunflower Project,” which uses sunflowers to spread beauty and hope throughout the historically Black Boston neighborhood, the installation will bathe a prominent section of the Museum’s lawn in a field of color, amplifying the power of self-determination as a tool to change one’s community.

James-Perry’s installation, Raven Reshapes Boston: A Native Corn Garden at the MFA, draws on planting techniques used by local Indigenous people for thousands of years, centering the reciprocal relationship between humans and the land. The artist and her collaborators from Green City Growers will create a field of corn, beans, and sedges—grown in mounds using a traditional Woodlands Native American method—in the shape of a horseshoe crab and framed by crushed shells. Over time, tall corn stalks will surround Appeal to the Great Spirit—made by a white artist for white audiences—emphasizing the enduring Native presence in New England and serving as a counterproposal to the misrepresentations and erasures the sculpture embodies.

Together, Holmes’s and James-Perry’s installations transform the MFA’s Huntington Avenue lawn into a growing, blooming summer garden that represents the resilience, strength, and hope of both artists, their communities, and their ancestors.

Dig into “Garden for Boston”

Learn more about the traditions and influences that shaped the garden and read the artists’ own words on their installations.

  • Huntington Avenue Entrance
  • Bank of America Plaza on the Avenue of the Arts (EX07; outside Huntington Avenue Entrance)