Artist-In-Residence
Overview
It has been recognized since Mount Auburn’s early decades that its aesthetic richness, educational value, and historic significance are derived in large part from the remarkable tapestry formed by its diverse collection of monuments carefully sited in the landscape. Visitors experienced the site as an outdoor museum as well as a place of burial. Today, Mount Auburn continues its dual mission of active cemetery and cultural landscape by striving to inspire all who visit and commemorating the dead in a landscape of exceptional beauty. While we long offered public tours and programs, in recent years we have further embraced our role as a cultural resource by working with contemporary artists and art organizations to create original site-specific programming.
In 2014, Mount Auburn became the first cemetery in the United States to establish an artist residency program. Our program supports the creation of new work by a contemporary artist inspired by his or her in-depth experience at the Cemetery. The resident artist is charged with creating works for visitors, drawn from their direct experience, that convey a fresh and innovative perspective of Mount Auburn. In 2024 we are celebrating our 10th anniversary!
Current Program
Since 2021, we have awarded smaller one-year residencies to a cohort of local artists to work on projects at Mount Auburn. Each artist is creating works or programs unique to and inspired by Mount Auburn. Artists also have the option to use their residency as a planning grant for a larger project to be completed the following year.
Artist-in-Residence Application
Award amount: $500 - $4,000
Application due date: February 1, 2025
Notification date: March 1, 2025
Project start date: April 1, 2025
End date: March 31, 2026
Read the application for more details:
Support Our Artist-in-Residence Program
Support from friends like you makes this program possible every year. Donate today to ensure many more years of creativity in our landscape!
2024 Artists-In-Residence
We are thrilled to announce five new artists for Mount Auburn’s Artist-in-Residence program, now in its tenth year. Between April 2024 and April 2025, the artists will be working on original site-specific creative projects inspired by an in-depth experience at the cemetery. All projects will be presented to the public and announcements will be made on our website, e-newsletters, and on social media.
Previous Artists 2014-2023
Roberto Mighty, New Media Artist, 2014-2016
Roberto Mighty, Mount Auburn’s inaugural artist-in-residence from 2014 through 2016, drew inspiration from the sights, sounds, and individual stories of the Cemetery to create earth.sky, an immersive meditation on life, death, ritual, history, landscape, nature, and culture. The original version of his project, designed to be screened in Mount Auburn’s Story Chapel, premiered in full in November 2016. To make the films, music, images, and storytelling of the original exhibit available to audiences worldwide, Mighty completed his residency with the release of an online version of his project.
Mary Bichner, Musician & Composer, 2016-2017
During her residency, musician and composer Mary Bichner composed a series of new works inspired by Mount Auburn’s breathtaking landscape and landmarks, using her sound-to-color synesthesia to select the musical components that best “match” the natural color palette of each location. As Bichner completed her compositions in 2016, she performed a series of “pop-up” concerts and gave talks about her artistic process. In early 2017, her Mount Auburn compositions were professionally recorded. Bichner completed her residency with two sold-out concerts in Story Chapel. Mount Auburn: Spring & Autumn Suites, the product of her Mount Auburn residency, is now available to stream or as a free digital download.
Patrick Gabridge, Playwright, 2018-2019
During his residency, playwright Patrick Gabridge wrote two series of plays inspired by Mount Auburn: The Mount Auburn Plays: The Nature Plays and The America Plays. In June 2019, we produced The Nature Plays, five one-act plays in the landscape that explored the rich natural environment of the Cemetery touching on topics such as spotted salamanders in Consecration Dell, and birders at Auburn Lake. In September 2019, we presented The America Plays, a series of five short plays that brought to life the drama, philosophies, and struggles of notable residents like Mount Auburn Founder Jacob Bigelow and sculptor Edmonia Lewis. The journey through the American experience concluded with an immigrant story on some of Mount Auburn’s Armenian residents.
Jesse Aron Green, Visual Artist, 2020
Mount Auburn Cemetery’s 2020 Artist-in-Residence was visual artist Jesse Aron Green. Jesse’s work has been exhibited at the Tate Modern; the Whitney Museum of American Art; the Harvard Art Museums; the ICA Boston; the Museum of Modern Art, Bologna; and many other museums and galleries around the world. Jesse received a BA from Harvard and an MFA from UCLA. During his residency, Jesse envisioned several ambitious and large-scale public art projects. Due to COVD-19, implementing these projects was not logistically possible. However, Jesse’s research and concepts were added to the Mount Auburn archives.
Five Questions for 2020 Artist-in-Residence Jesse Aron Green
Zhonghe (Elena) Li, watercolors & papercutting, 2021
Zhonghe (Elena) Li has been visiting Mount Auburn for many years, but her deep connection with the place developed after the pandemic started, when Mount Auburn became a sanctuary for her during social isolation. Her almost daily walks at the Cemetery became the source of her artistic creativity and led her to envision a project, The Art of Living Together, about the vital interconnectedness of art and nature and the ways the two are balanced at Mount Auburn. Li’s work was a combination of watercolor paintings, traditional Chinese papercuts, and video compositing and digital animations.
Exploring the Balance of People and Nature with Zhonghe (Elena) Li
Ponnapa Prakkamakul, pastel plein-air, 2021
Ponnapa Prakkamakul explored Mount Auburn’s landscape with her project, Seasons of Change. Painting in plein-air, she used a variety of processes including pastels and mixed-media, to observe seasonal changes at Mount Auburn. “As a landscape architect and immigrant, environments – and our relationship to them – fundamentally inform my work. Mount Auburn is an ideal place to observe, explore, and reflect upon the concept of change and connections between humans and nature.”
Ben Denzer, mixed-media, 2021
Mount Auburn’s plant collections was the focus of Ben Denzer’s artist book. Denzer compiled organic materials (leaves, flowers, seeds, etc.), arranging and preserving the samples into plastic sheets bound together as a large book. Denzer published the book via Catalog Press, a small edition press he uses as a framework to make art and explore how information and objects are collected and preserved. 6,000 DANDELIONS is “a compression of Mount Auburn’s remarkable plant diversity into a single sculptural form; a beautiful and unique book.”
Documenting Dandelions: Artist Ben Denzer Catalogs Springtime Blooms
Jennifer Lin, choreographer & dancer, 2021
Choreographer and dancer Jennifer Lin created an original site-specific contemporary dance that was performed in Hazel Dell at Mount Auburn. Her project, The Gathering Place, drew inspiration from “themes of history and place, mourning and meditation, and appreciation of nature, while connecting the past with the present.”
Todd Thibaud, musician & composer, 2021
Musician Todd Thibaud composed, produced, and recorded two original songs, inspired by his research and personal experience of Mount Auburn. He explored ideas relating to humans’ relationship with death and grief, “and the important role that a dedicated space of remembrance can play in that process.”
Songwriting for Mount Auburn – A Conversation with Todd Thibaud
Madge Evers and Thierry Borcy, photography & spore prints, 2022
Visual artist Madge Evers and photographer Thierry Borcy collaborated on Mount Auburn Statuary: A New Way of Seeing. Borcy captured images of Mount Auburn’s monuments using monochrome photography, then Evers transformed the printed images with patterns of foraged mushroom spores, and the altered images were re-photographed, interpreting the original monuments in a transformed context. “The created imagery will depict the landscape, link human created statuary with natural materials, and present the regenerative qualities present in biodiversity, specifically fungi and plants.”
Mount Auburn Statuary: A New Way of Seeing: A Conversation with Madge Evers and Thierry Borcy
Ira Klein, musician & composer, 2022
Musician Ira Klein composed, produced, and performed The Oak Cycle, a series of guitar pieces inspired by specific oak trees at Mount Auburn. Klein is a recent graduate of Berklee College of Music, and his concentration in American roots music will inform his compositions. “I frequently visit the Cemetery, as I am fascinated by its natural landscape and bird population. As a musician, I find myself deeply inspired and recharged by the Cemetery’s tranquil environment.”
Capturing Mount Auburn’s Oaks in Music: A Conversation with Ira Klein
Simone Nemes, multi-disciplinary, 2022
Simone Nemes, a former gardening technician at Mount Auburn returned to create Memorializing Nature, a series of four seasonally-themed illustrations of fantastical urns. These images drew upon Nemes’ deep understanding of plants and the natural world from her previous horticultural career. “Painting in a realistic style, I will re-interpret traditional urn designs [found at Mount Auburn] to incorporate the flora and fauna of the cemetery, with each season featuring native species that are active during those months.”
Jill Slosburg-Ackerman, sculptor & wood-carver, 2022
Jill Slosburg-Ackerman created Mourning Benches – several portable, low-to-the ground benches carved with designs inspired by Mount Auburn’s flora. Her project was inspired by her own experience of visiting her husband’s grave at the Cemetery. “I have longed for the means to sit closer, in order to comfortably commune with his spirit and to immerse myself in the landscape. Creating the Mourning Benches is my gesture of amelioration.”
Liz Walker, ballet dancer & choreographer, 2022
Liz Walker produced Dance of Arrival, a contemporary dance performance on Mount Auburn’s grounds. The theme of her dance connected directly with her pregnancy at the time, and was inspired by her experience visiting Mount Auburn with her partner upon learning of her pregnancy. During their walks, they were deeply impacted by the graves of children, and found themselves seeking inspiration for baby names amongst the monuments. “This site-specific dance work will explore themes of life and death as they relate to Mount Auburn Cemetery as a destination for pivotal moments in one’s life. A crucial touchpoint for the project is my experience as a dancer who is pregnant and preparing to welcome a new life.”
Choreographing New Life and Death: A Conversation with Liz Walker
John M. Williams, visual artist, 2022
John M. Williams created four collages depicting the Cemetery’s landscape in each season, layering pieces of cut paper to create a sculptural effect: Seeing Mount Auburn with a Different Eye. His work is influenced by his experience as an artist who is autistic. “The title of my project relates to the special skills and way of seeing the world that comes with autism. My work is a completely new way of seeing and depicting the landscape.”
Seeing Mount Auburn with a Different Eye: A Conversation with John M. Williams
Swati Biswas, dancer and choreographer, 2023
Drawing from her training in Indian Classical dance, for her residency, Swati choreographed and performed a series of original dance pieces that celebrate the beauty of seasonal change at Mount Auburn.
Seasons of Life: A Conversation with Artist-in-Residence Swati Biswas
Resa Blatman, visual artist, 2023
Informed by a rich history of painting and contemporary artmaking processes, Resa’s projects also call on poetry, science, and nature. Resa made a series of paintings and several glass moss terrariums for her residency at Mount Auburn.
Wisdom of the Trees: A Conversation with Artist-in-Residence Resa Blatman
Billy Hickey, documentary photography, 2023
Capturing all the seasons, Billy immersed himself in the intersections of the natural and human worlds creating documentary-style photographs of Mount Auburn’s natural ecosystem and the humans who support, study, and preserve it.
A Matter of Life: A Conversation with Artist-in-Residence Billy Hickey
Carolyn Oliver, poet, 2023
Carolyn Oliver created a series of epistolary poems inviting the reader-friend to join her at a particular place or time in the cemetery; elegies (these too, so far, in the form of letters) to friends recently lost and friends in palliative care; praise poems, which attempt to describe the experience of the cemetery in a particular month; and lyric poems that don’t fit neatly into these categories. The poems were read aloud on a roaming reading.
On Friendship: A Conversation with Artist-in-Residence Carolyn Oliver
Eden Rayz, composer, cellist, vocalist, 2023
Eden reconstructed the recently removed Bigelow Chapel organ pipes into a new instrument played like a gamelan. She wrote a set of original compositions for the new instrument, similar to Buddhist death awareness meditations.
Debra Wise & Eliza Fichter, storytelling, 2023
For their residency, this mother-daughter duo created a series of audio stories crafted from interviews with people connected to Mount Auburn. The audio stories explore how and why we talk with each other about death and with whom we have those conversations.
Life and Death Stories: A Conversation with Artists-in-Residence Debra Wise & Eliza Fichter