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...regular. Boston Chamber Music Society, Sunday April 30th at 7:30, in Sanders Theatre. Tickets available through the Harvard Box Office, (617) 495-2222. Regular: $17-46, Students: $8. For those Harvard students who can’t be bothered to make the trip to Boston, two of Boston??s premier classical music groups will come to you. This Sunday, the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra and the Boston Chamber Music Society will both perform in Sanders Theatre. Eighteen-year-old violinist Caitlin Tully will solo for the Boston Philharmonic Orchestra, conducted by Benjamin Zander, in an afternoon performance...

Author: By Alexander B. Fabry, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Boston Philharmonic Orchestra and Boston Chamber Music Society | 4/26/2006 | See Source »

...Boston??s Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA), however, has a different definition of history. Founded in 1936 as the first museum in the United States dedicated solely to contemporary art, the ICA has a long tradition of supporting the present...

Author: By Natasha M. Platt, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: No Longer ‘Banned in Boston,’ Modern Art Gets New Home | 4/26/2006 | See Source »

Stringent censorship policies against “objectionable” content stunted the Boston arts scene for much of the last two centuries. The phrase “Banned in Boston?? became a joke among the cultural elite, who observed that censorship in Boston meant almost guaranteed success in the rest of the country...

Author: By Natasha M. Platt, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: No Longer ‘Banned in Boston,’ Modern Art Gets New Home | 4/26/2006 | See Source »

...opening of the new ICA coincides with a time of incredible development across Boston??s art world, following about a century of inactivity...

Author: By Natasha M. Platt, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: No Longer ‘Banned in Boston,’ Modern Art Gets New Home | 4/26/2006 | See Source »

...While Boston??s museums have succeeded to some extent in acquiring modern art that is already renowned, they have met the work of emerging artists with more reluctance...

Author: By Natasha M. Platt, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: No Longer ‘Banned in Boston,’ Modern Art Gets New Home | 4/26/2006 | See Source »

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