Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
|
Monday |
Tuesday |
Wednesday |
Thursday |
Friday |
Saturday |
Sunday |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
4 events,![]() Get ready to set sail for adventure! On Sunday, 11th of January, 2026, we cordially invite you to experience Boats, Goats and Dancing Ladies: A Caribbean Cacophony by Susan Mains. A solo exhibition of epic proportions, Susan's art will take you on a Caribbean journey spanning churning oceans and vibrant lands, full of racing sailboats, joyous rhythms […] ![]() BIM: The Beautiful A celebration of our island—told through the eyes, hands, and hearts of Caribbean artists.This powerful group exhibition at Caribbean Brushstrokes invites you to experience BIM as artists see it: our seas, our spirit, our stories, and our shared sense of place.Each work is a tribute to Barbados—its beauty, rhythm, memory, and movement—captured […] |
||||||
4 events,![]() On Sunday, 8th of February, 2026, we cordially invite you to the launch of our newest exhibition, "Contemporary Male Artist". Opening at 3:30 PM to 5:30 PM, this exciting exhibition brings together 9 local male artists of incredible calibre - Ahmad Rasheed Boodhoo, Clairmonte Mapp, Denzil Mann, Dr. Adrian Richards, Everick Lynton, Glenroy Jordan, Mario […] |
||||||
5 events,![]() February 27th - October 3rd at the Barbados Museum & Historical Society. “The BMHS is pleased to announce the exhibition Am I a Bad Girl, Nanny? Cries of Innocence and of Experience! In this new body of work, internationally recognised Barbadian artist Joscelyn Gardner engages with two ambrotypes in the museum’s historic photograph collection as sites of […] ![]() Harriet Thomas Weekes: The Right to Opacity at The Barbados Museum & Historical Society. Feb 27th - Oct 3rd.“Announcing the exhibition Harriet Thomas Weekes: The Right to Opacity, which engages two rare photographic records of a Black Barbadian woman who lived from enslavement into legal freedom (1815–1897).Rather than seeking to tell her story in full, […] |