About the Artist Studios
The Artist Studios at the Boston Center for the Arts are dedicated to providing affordable workspace and a supportive environment to artists in all disciplines, and at all stages of artistic development. Artists working in studios at the BCA include painters, printmakers, sculptors, filmmakers, craftspeople, writers, performing artists and other art-related organizations.
The building includes fifty work-only studios for artists and arts organizations (studios are not live-in spaces). Studio sizes range from 110 sq ft to 1500 sq ft.
Artists and arts organizations are selected and placed in studios at the BCA through an application and jury-review process as studios become available.
If you would like more information on the Artist Studios or are interested in applying for a studio, please download the application instructions.
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Studio 409

While writing her senior thesis as a social studies major at Harvard in 1985, Stone said she first realized a passion for film during a screening of “Enormous Changes at the Last Minute.” The film was written by John Sayles, and was about single mothers. “It was really powerful and had a lot to say,” Stone said. “That was my big epiphany moment. I just had stories I wanted to tell that could best be told visually, because my first love has always been storytelling.”
Help Alice fund her documentary... Angelo Unwritten
View her kickstarter campaign |
Studio 214

Of particular interest to Ortale are skylines, city-scape, structure and the visual energy where the sky meets the edge of building forms. Contrasts, such as hard/soft, blue/orange, light/dark are all emphasized. Abstraction of both form and color create a two dimensional plane that is layered one over the other for a sequential sense of depth. |
Studio 212

Akiyama's work is where Happy Land and Bunny World meet. It is where strange elevator music is the perpetual soundtrack. Hello Kitty is Akiyama's sacred icon. |
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