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Solar array at landfill could be built starting next summer

September 15, 2022

The town has cleared a major hurdle in its years-long effort to create a solar photovoltaic array atop the capped landfill next to the transfer station.

The National Park Service owns the land along Route 2A and up the beginning of Mill Street, over which the town must create utility access to the site. The federal government was “vigorously protecting their rights” but recently came to an agreement with the town for an access permit, Town Administrator Tm Higgins reported at the September 12 Select Board meeting.

There will be an informational meeting via Zoom (passcode: 335408) on Wednesday, Sept. 21 at 7 p.m. to explain the project background and impacts to abutters and others. According to an FAQ document that’s been distributed to abutters, the only noise from the installation once it’s operable will be a low hum from the inverter when the sun is shining and HVAC equipment inside the energy storage system as a volume that will be “negligible” at the nearby transfer station.

The solar array is expected to generate about 1 megawatt of electricity, which will feed into Eversource’s distribution system via the utility poles and power lines along Mill Street and be used to power town-owned buildings. The town will receive financial credits from Eversource for the energy produced, as well as annual property tax payments.

In 2017, residents approved a “land swap” arrangement whereby some of the landfill property was taken out of conservation status in exchange for putting the same amount of land elsewhere into conservation. That land is part of the Wang property on Bedford Road that the town purchased, now the site of an athletic field as well as nine acres of conservation land.

The town hopes to issue a request for proposals in October 2022 and receive competitive bids from solar companies by mid-November. Construction lasting 4-6 months could begin in summer 2023.

It may also be possible to create a trail link during the process of creating access to the site, Higgins said.

Category: conservation, news Leave a Comment

News acorns

September 14, 2022

Register for this weekend’s Hazardous Waste Collection Day

Lincolnites who want to bring materials to discard at the regional Hazardous Waste Collection Day on Sunday, Sept. 18 must preregister by the end of the day on Thursday, Sept. 15. Visit this Lexington town web page for more information and to register.

Select Board to discuss renaming Columbus Day

Last spring, Lincoln students wrote to the Select Board to request that the town change the name of the Columbus Day holiday to Indigenous Peoples’ Day. The Select Board will discuss the proposal during its meeting on Monday, Sept. 19 at 6:30 p.m. and will likely take the matter under advisement until its October 3 meeting to provide residents the opportunity to share their views before a vote is taken. The board’s meetings are held in a hybrid format, creating the opportunity for residents to attend in person or via Zoom (passcode: 378902). Those who are unable to attend but would like to provide input are welcome to e-mail the board care of Administrative Assistant Peggy Elder (elderp@lincolntown.org).

Share ideas for Complete Streets grants

Lincoln is in the process of preparing a new five-year Complete Streets Prioritization Plan. Complete Streets is a state-funded grant program to help municipalities improve their streets to accommodate users of all ages and abilities, whether driving, cycling, or walking. Each municipality is allowed up to $400,000 through a four-year rolling period.

Previous Complete Streets grants funded the pocket park with its bike repair station and informational kiosk, repairs to various bike path segments that had been damaged by tree roots, a new sidewalk segment on Lincoln Road near the Ryan Estate, and a crosswalk with flashing lights and a pedestrian island on Route 117 close to the Lincoln Road intersection.

Town officials will be using an online platform called Wikimapping to get public feedback on where in town you would like to see improvements for walking, cycling, driving, and public transit. Click here through the end of October to share your thoughts about transportation issues and opportunities. There will also be a public forum on Thursday, Oct. 27 at 7 p.m. via Zoom at this link (passcode: 783032).

Category: news Leave a Comment

My Turn: Are you tending to our collective garden?

September 14, 2022

By Barbara Slayter

Lincoln is a beautiful town, green and fragrant at this time of year as New England tips from summer into autumn. Lincoln’s residents take good care of their gardens beginning with the daffodils and tulips of early spring, on through the rhododendrons, day lilies, and black-eyed Susans into fall. The trails are well cared for and enjoyed.

But how well do we tend to our larger social and political garden beyond the borders of our gracious community? We are a thoughtful, well-educated group of people tending carefully to the professional and business interests for which we are trained. Are we paying attention to the political context in which we are able to pursue these interests as fully as we do?

A few pages into a different sort of “gardening” manual, How Democracies Die by Daniel Ziblatt and Steve Levitsky, will reveal just how much our national political garden needs attention. The precarious balance between Democrats and Republicans in both the House and the Senate requires our focus.

Surely we are not so complacent that we might stand by as the House becomes populated by newly elected 2020 election deniers. Are we ready for expanding fallout from the reversal of Roe v. Wade, for increasing culture wars against the LGBTQ community, or for a rollback on climate interventions?

It is time for us to examine the political garden beyond Lincoln and even beyond Massachusetts. What elections around the country are the most important — the most strategic — for preserving our democracy? How can we deploy our personal, limited funds and time most effectively to assure that we sustain not only our democracy, but the momentum we have recently been gaining with the chips and science legislation, the Inflation Reduction Act, health care for veterans, and more?

What can you do — what can I do, and what can each of us do — to put our energies where the stakes are high — maybe Georgia, New Hampshire, Wisconsin or elsewhere? Let’s help shape these elections in order to keep the House and the Senate Blue. This election isn’t about gas prices or gun safety. It is about threats to our democracy. Our national political garden needs some work. Let’s get at it!

For ideas and strategies that can address our national political landscape, join the Lincoln Democrats and Tom Hallock and Ed Loechler, co-founders of Force Multiplier, a Boston-based volunteer Democratic fundraising organization, for an informational (not fundraising) meeting about how to support key Senatorial and Congressional candidates in the midterms. Click here to register and get the Zoom link.


“My Turn” is a forum for readers to offer their letters to the editor or views on any subject of interest to other Lincolnites. Submissions must be signed with the writer’s name and street address and sent via email to lincolnsquirrelnews@gmail.com. Items will be edited for punctuation, spelling, style, etc., and will be published at the discretion of the editor. Submissions containing personal attacks, errors of fact, or other inappropriate material will not be published.

Category: My Turn Leave a Comment

Correction

September 14, 2022

The September 13 story headlined “First Parish in Lincoln gets a dynamic duo” incorrectly said that Rev. Kit Novotny’s parents founded a UCC church in Wellesley Hills (they joined one but did not found it). The article also misstated Rev. Nate Klug’s college major. He studied English, while Novotny majored in theater and anthropology. The story has been corrected.

Category: news Leave a Comment

First Parish in Lincoln gets a dynamic duo

September 13, 2022

Nate Klug and Kit Novotny, co-ministers at the First Parish in Lincoln.

The First Parish in Lincoln began enjoying a two-for-one deal when Rev. Nate Klug and Rev. Kit Novotny — high school sweethearts who grew up in Wellesley — started their dual ministry in August.

Though both have an affinity for the arts, they came to their religious careers by slightly different routes. Novotny calls herself a “cradle Congregationalist” — her parents were lapsed Catholics who later joined a United Church of Christ (UCC) in Wellesley Hills. “The church was our community with a lot of my best friends growing up,” she said. “My parents were super involved and I was a pretty spiritually interested kid.”

Klug, meanwhile,  grew up without any religious tradition. “It was quite a surprise to me,” he said. “I kind of stumbled on faith on college.” After a friend’s father was killed, “I was just asking a lot of big questions… I got this germ of faith which was quite weird for my family.”

Both Klug and Novotny went to the University of Chicago, After graduating with a degree in English, Klug was interning for a literary magazine in Chicago when his editor invited him to a church service. “I was blown away by the sermon,” he said. “Eventually I was at a moment where a spiritual commitment was something I was ready for.”

Novotny, who majored in theater and anthropology, was involved in theater and improv in Chicago and was an intern at the famous Second City comedy club in that city for a year after she graduated. She also worked at comedy club in Iowa during her first ministerial job after grad school. “There’s definitely sermon fodder in standup,” she said with a laugh.

After they graduated from Yale Divinity School and were ordained in the UCC in 2013, they applied for a few jobs as a couple but eventually wound up serving as ministers in separate churches in the San Francisco area. A couple of years ago, they began looking for jobs back east so that they and their preschool-age daughters could be closer to their families (“we have four very enthusiastic grandparents in the Boston area,” Novotny said).

Because of the pandemic, Klug could continue his other work in California even after they moved to Massachusetts about a year ago and began looking for church posts locally. A poet and essayist as well as a minister (his latest book is Hosts and Guests: Poems), Klug teaches remotely in the MFA program at Dominican University in San Rafael, Calif., and in the creative writing at the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley. Novotny is also a writer and a certified yoga instructor with training in trauma-sensitive yoga.

As seminary students, both had mentors who’d worked as co-pastors, so when they learned about the FPL opening, they approached it as a team. “We kind of introduced the idea to the search committee here,” Klug said. “They were really rigorous and diligent about finding out what it would be like. It was a real process of discernment on both sides [in asking] does the church want to take a leap of faith on both of us and vice versa?” They found that FPL is “a really creative place, a community church with a big spiritual tent — it seemed like a place that might be open to this kind of creative ministry model.”

As for the division of labor, the couple will split most things 50-50 and trade off preaching. “You can come to it a little more fresh when you don’t have to do it every week,” Novotny said. “The community will get a little more diversity of voice since we have slightly different styles.”

Both will do pastoral care visits and adult education. “This congregation is very interested in learning and are voracious readers,” Klug said.

They also have a few ideas for new approaches and events to engage the community. Klug will lead a group called “Poetry for Seekers” while Novotny will lead “Coffee and Compassion,” where she and participants can reflect on what requires compassion in the world and learn about tools for connection and emotional resilience. The pair is also co-authoring a blog, and they’ll take turns hosting “Theology on Tap” discussions at the Tack Room each month, with the first one scheduled for September 23. The events are open to all, including those who aren’t church members or who don’t live in Lincoln.

“Our first priority is building relationships and connections,” Novotny said. “Religion has a lot of baggage, some of it well deserved, that might keep people from walking through the door. There was a loneliness epidemic happening even pre-Covid, and religious institutions have been declining in popularity. I think there’s a longing where people aren’t all getting those needs met, so hopefully the church can keep reinventing itself” to foster those connections.

Category: features, religious Leave a Comment

News acorns

September 12, 2022

Apply for Cultural Council grants

The Lincoln Cultural Council is accepting proposals for programs that serve Lincoln residents. Register here for a Massachusetts Cultural Council webinar for new applicants on Tuesday, Sept. 13 at 6 p.m. The application deadline is October 17.  Click here to learn more about local grant priorities and how to apply. Questions? Email Meg Ramsey with any questions at meg.ramsey@verizon.net.

Library hosts banned-book discussions

To recognize Banned Books Week, there will discussions about banned books at the Lincoln Public Library:

  • Readers in grades 4-6 and their families: Monday, Sept. 19 at 6 p.m. Email dleopold@minlib.net to register.
  • Readers in grades 7+ and their families: Wednesday, Sept. 21 at 6 p.m. Email sfeather@minlib.net to register.

Kids’ dance classes for LincFam members

LincFam (the Lincoln Family Association) invites new members to join the group and participate in a series of free classes for children ages 1-5 led by Lincoln resident Margie Topf, founder and artistic director of the Topf Center for Dance Education. Classes take place on four Saturday mornings: September 17 and 24, and October 8 and 15. To learn more, see this LincFam web page or email info@lincfam.org.

Cronin lecture at deCordova

The Paul J. Cronin Memorial Lecture at the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum will take place at the museum on Wednesday, Oct. 19 from 6:30–8 p.m. The event is a conversation among leading museum figures Candice Hopkins, executive director of the Forge Project; Julie Decker, director/CEO of the Anchorage Museum; and Jane Winchell, director of the Art & Nature Center and leader of the Museum Climate & Environment Initiative at the Peabody Essex Museum. The panel will share ideas with one another about the relationship of art and arts organization to climate change discourse. Panelists will reveal ways in which their organizations are forging connections between cultural, artistic, and natural resources. Moderated by Jessica May, artistic director at the deCordova and managing director of art and  exhibitions for The Trustees. Click here for more information and to register.

Category: arts, kids, news Leave a Comment

Police log for Aug. 29–Sept. 7, 2022

September 11, 2022

August 29

Cambridge Turnpike westbound (5:11 p.m.) — 911 calls about a car fire on Route at the Lexington line. The car was in Lexington, whose fire department was on scene and the Lincoln Fire Department call was cancelled.

Page Road (8:16 p.m.) — Caller reported wires arcing on the pool area. Fire Department responded and turned off the power to the pool area. Homeowner will contact an electrician.

August 30

Paul Revere Lot, North Great Road (1:53 a.m.) — Officer checked on a party on the Minuteman trail. The person was walking home to Bedford and was fine.

North Great Road (5:19 p.m.) — Caller reported hitting a traffic sign earlier in the day. Officer checked the area and was unable to locate; he’s following up with the caller.

Ridge Road (7:51 p.m.) — A walk-in to the station reported that he received a delivery which did not include all of the items purchased. The party was advised to contact the delivery company or the vendor.

August 31

Highway Department, Lewis Street (2:27 a.m.) — Officer noticed the fence at the cell tower was open. He checked and everything appeared to be secure (apparent neglect).

Concord Road (7:58 a.m.) — One-car crash involving a guard rail Route 126 near Walden Pond. No injuries, one vehicle towed.

Paul Revere Lot, North Great Road (8:56 p.m.) — Officer checked on a vehicle in the lot. Everything was OK and the parties were on their way.

Silver Birch Lane (9:47 p.m.) — Caller reported their neighbor’s dog was barking. Officer responded and spoke to the owner, who was taking the dog in for the night.

September 1

Doherty’s Garage (4:07 a.m.) — Officer found a bus door open. It checked out OK; appeared to be neglect.

Windingwood Lane (4:29 a.m.) — Emerson Hospital called to see if the residence was unlocked as the resident was being discharged and didn’t have their keys on them. An officer followed up with the caller.

Hanscom Drive (7:18 a.m.) — Car vs. bicyclist crash. Minor injuries; patient refused transport to the hospital.

Cambridge Turnpike Westbound (8:22 a.m.) — Caller reported someone threw hotdogs on their driveway.

Concord Road (12:58 p.m.) — Caller reported a party sitting on the side of the roadway near Winchelsea Road. An officer checked on the party and they were OK.

Codman Road (3:50 p.m.) — Request for a well-being check on a resident. Officer checked and the resident wasn’t home.

South Commons (5:27 p.m.) — Court paperwork delivered to the resident.

Silver Birch Lane (6:55 p.m.) — Caller reported their neighbor’s dog was barking. An officer called the owner, who was bringing the dog in for the night.

North Commons (7:55 P.M.) — Resident called regarding suspicious activity that occurred a couple of days previously. An officer followed up with the resident.

Silver Birch Lane (9:10 p.m.) — Caller reported their neighbor’s dog was barking. An officer responded and spoke to the owner of the dog regarding the ongoing issue.

September 2

Lincoln Road (5:54 p.m.) — Caller requested a well-being check on a party who was hanging around the mall area; the caller thought the person may have needed services. An officer responded and spoke to the party, who stated they were all set and not in need of any assistance.

North Commons (6:02 p.m.) — An officer followed up with a resident regarding the earlier report of suspicious activity.

South Commons (8:19 p.m.) — Court paperwork was delivered to the resident.

Wells Road (11:46 p.m.) — Caller reported their neighbor’s TV was very loud and causing a disturbance. While an officer was en route the caller reported the TV had been shut off.

Wells Road (11:59 p.m.) — Caller reported 2 people hanging on the doors of a building. Officers responded but were unable to locate anyone.

September 3

Hartwell Lot, North Great Road (2:31 a.m.) — An officer checked on a party in the lot. Everything was OK and the party was on their way.

Lincoln Road (12:20 p.m.) — Caller reported a party was lying down and blocking one of the walkways. An officer responded and asked the party not to block the walkway.

September 4

Concord Road (6:58 p.m.) — Caller reported texting the wrong number by accident and they’re now receiving threats. An officer responded and spoke to the party and took a report.

South Great Road (9:13 p.m.) — Caller reported a party walking along the sidewalk and appearing to be in need of assistance. Officer responded and found the party and brought them back to their residence.

Tower Road (11:41 p.m.) — Dispatch received a call of an erratic operator on Route 117 who turned onto Tower Road. An officer checked the area and came across the party on Tower Road. After an investigation, officers arrested Mestjana Mustafaj, 33, of of Manchester, Conn., for OUI–liquor.

September 5

Nothing of note.

September 6

Tower Road (8:32 a.m.) — Caller asked to speak to an officer about where their landscaper can park their vehicle.

Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (6:01 p.m.) — Officer checked on a vehicle on Route 2. The operator’s vehicle is disabled and they had AAA on the way.

September 7

Tower Road (8:19 a.m.) — Caller reported two goats in the roadway. Dispatch called the owner, who was coming to get them.

South Great Road (9:31 a.m.) — Caller reported a problem with the railroad gates. An officer followed up with the MBTA, who investigated and found that the gates were working properly.

Lexington Road (1:23 p.m.) — Caller reported a sick coyote in the area. Animal Control was notified.

Cambridge Turnpike eastbound (2:01 p.m.) — Caller reported an outside odor of natural gas. National Grid was notified.

Donelan’s Supermarket (6:53 p.m.) — Caller asked to speak to an officer regarding suspicious activity in the area of the mall. An officer responded and spoke to the party.

Silver Birch Lane (9:11 p.m.) — Caller reported their neighbor’s dog was barking. An officer responded and spoke to the owner of the dog and also followed up with Animal Control.

Category: police Leave a Comment

James Cunningham, 1949–2022

September 8, 2022

Jim Cunningham

Flags on town buildings will be lowered to half-staff next week to commemorate James F. Cunningham of Lincoln, who died at age 73 on Friday, September 2, 2022. Jim passed away peacefully with the assistance of hospice after a battle with pancreatic cancer. He was predeceased by his mother and father, Claire Cunningham and Robert M. Cunningham, and he has left behind his brothers, Peter and William (Billy).

Jim had great love for the town of Lincoln, for his alma mater Cornell, and for Kent Island off the coast of Grand Manan in Canada.

Born, raised, and educated in Lincoln, Jim was a devoted community volunteer. He single-handedly organized, implemented and managed the town’s local cable television program, helping to increase access to the activities of town government and other community events. Jim possessed a keen engineering mind and a small-town sensibility about managing budgets, and he served for decades completely without compensation.

The Select Board used the occasion of the March 2022 Annual Town Meeting to honor Jim by presenting him with the annual Bright Light award for singlehandedly launching and maintaining Lincoln’s local cable program. In its presentation, the board said:

”Each year we present the Bright Light award to a resident or town staff member whose contributions to our town deserve to be celebrated. Now if you have ever come across Comcast channel 8 or Verizon channel 33 on your television, you will quickly realize that Lincoln has its own vibrant cable TV channel.  We owe this great viewing alternative to CNN, Fox News or ESPN to our own Jim Cunningham.

“Jim was appointed to Lincoln’s cable committee way back in 2002 and has served as its chair for most of this time. As chair, Jim has been our point person for license negotiations with our cable providers.  More importantly, Jim has built our local cable channel from the ground up. An electrical engineer by education and training, Jim designed and helped install our cable programming infrastructure. He not only manages the technology and equipment, but also does most of the filming and production that allows the town to broadcast many key meeting (such as Select Board and School Committee meetings), special events, and lectures, providing a truly valuable service to the town. Jim spends many hours each week recording and broadcasting this town content for our enjoyment. 

“We on the Select Board are especially appreciative of how Jim always manages to film us from our good sides! Jim’s technical know-how and passion for what he does, which he has provided free of charge for many years, has saved the town thousands upon thousands of dollars, as other communities have needed to create full time employee positions for this work.

“Born, raised, and educated here, Jim is immensely proud of his Lincoln roots. And we could not be more proud and grateful to you, Jim, for all that you have contributed to Lincoln. Please join me in giving Jim Cunningham a round of applause as this year’s bright light award recipient.”

Additionally, working closely with Save Our Heritage, Jim was project manager for the restoration of the Barrett house in Concord.

Jim graduated from Cornell University with undergraduate and master’s degrees in electrical engineering. As an undergraduate student, he was business manager, photo editor and editor-in-chief of the yearbook for two years. Since graduation, Jim has remained involved as a volunteer, advocate and donor to Cornell. He served on the advisory board for Systems Engineering and spent time teaching students about systems engineering and its tools. In recent years he established the James F. Cunningham ’71 Assistant Director of Student Project Teams in the College of Engineering with an endowed gift. Mostly Jim talked about his time working with students and fellow Cornellians with great affection.

Jim Cunningham’s perseverance and talent brought the Kent Island’s weather station into modern times. What his father started in 1938 continues today, available to the world on the web, thanks in great part to his son.

A private graveside service will be held at Lincoln Cemetery. Jim’s public memorial service will be announced at a later date. Arrangements are under the care of the Concord Funeral Home. Click here to leave a message or remembrance.

Category: obits 4 Comments

Onerva Kohonen, 1921-2022

September 7, 2022

Onerva Korhonen

Onerva Miriam (Watka) Korhonen age 101 of Lincoln passed away on August 11. Onerva faced the world in a positive fashion right to the end, smiling and appreciative of everyone who helped. She was predeceased by husbands Edwin (1919-1987) and Edward (1920-2008), mother to Wayne (Margaret), Cynthia, and Dana (Patti); grandmother to Adam (Morgan), Rachel (Keith), Kathryn, and Ethan; great grandmother to Wesley, Cooper, and Nathan; and aunt to many nephews and nieces. 

Onerva was always involved in her community: she volunteered in the schools, at church, and on the Council on Aging. She still sang in the choir at age 99. She worked with the 4-H Club. She was a reader. She spoke Finnish fluently and she loved to paint. She loved her neighbors. She believed in women’s, LGBTQIA, and immigrant rights and said so out loud. She cross-country skied with the “ski group.” She will be missed and remembered.

Burial was in Lincoln Cemetery. Arrangements were under the care of Concord Funeral Home. Click here to leave a remembrance.

Category: obits Leave a Comment

News acorns

September 6, 2022

Codman Estate arts fair on Saturday

The annual Codman Estate Fine Arts & Crafts Festival takes place on Saturday, Sept. 10 from 10 am. – 4 p.m. Now in its 40th year, the event features the work of nearly 100 local artisans. Work includes painting, woodworking, food products, jewelry, photography, glass, clothing, metalwork, and more. Enjoy live entertainment, a food court, and first-floor tours of the Codman Estate. Member tickets are free; nonmember tickets are $5. Click here to buy tickets.

Author talk by Anita Harris

“The View from Third Street: Anita Harris and the Harrisburg Independent Press: is the title of an author talk at the Lincoln Public Library on Saturday, Oct. 1 at 3 p.m. The View From Third Street is an unconventional memoir draws on Harris’s experiences as cofounder of the Harrisburg Independent Press, a weekly alternative newspaper that covered the 1972 trial of the Harrisburg Seven — nuns and priests stood accused of conspiring to kidnap Presidential Advisor Henry Kissinger and blow up underground heating tunnels in Washington, D.C. A limited number of autographed copies will be available for purchase. Refreshment will be served.

Lyric opera concert at Gropius House

The Gropius House will host “Lyric Opera Revisited: A Musical Evening with Ben Schwendener and Carley De Franco” on Sunday, Oct. 2 from 4:30–6:00 p.m. The Gropius family enjoyed a wide variety of musical genres including innovative interpretations of classical music. Enjoy an evening of music with opera singer Carley DeFranco and pianist Ben Schwendener, whose sounds combine lyrical operatic improvisations based on natural geometric design, contemporary poetry, and Bach are some elements serving their inspired sound. Click here to buy tickets (members $65, nonmembers $75).

Sing in the First Parish choir

Residents are invited to sing for the First Parish in Lincoln choir, which meets every Thursday night from 7-8:30 p.m. in the parish hall (stone church) and Sunday mornings at 9 a.m. The choir welcomes those of high school age and older from all religious backgrounds and abilities. The anthems draw from diverse genres including sacred harp, gospel, Renaissance, baroque, contemporary, jazz, and folk. Singers use masks unless they take a rapid test at the start of rehearsal. For more information, email mirandaloud574@gmail.com. 

Emily Beekman

Lincoln’s Beekman wins recognition

Emily P. Beekman of Lincoln was included in the 2023 edition of the Best Lawyers: Ones to Watch in America for her work in elder law, litigation – trusts and estates, and trusts and estates.  She was first listed in 2021. Beekman is an associate in Mirick O’Connell’s trusts and estates group with a focus in estate planning, estate and trust administration, and tax planning. 

Locke awarded deCordova’s Rappaport Prize

Steve Locke is the winner of the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum’s Rappaport Prize. Spanning painting, drawing, sculpture, and installation, Locke’s artistic practice critically addresses the history of western art and interrogates the connections between desire, identity, and violence. Locke has exhibited extensively, including solo exhibitions at the Institute for Contemporary Art in Boston and the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, where he showed Three Deliberate Greys for Freddie: A Memorial for Freddie Gray (2019). Locke, a professor of fine art at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, N.Y., received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2020. A free lecture is planned at the deCordova in spring 2023. 

Category: news Leave a Comment

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