
Concertgoers enjoy live music at one of Boston’s city-run parks.

La Selección performed at the O’Day Playground in Boston as part of the Tito Puente Latin Music series on July 6, 2023.

The Boston Parks and Recreation Department hosted an outdoor movie night as part of its ParkARTS program.
After a long, drawn-out winter, Boston comes alive in the summertime. Cold, dreary weeks give way to sun-filled days, and public places that for months stood sparse as city-dwellers holed up indoors spring to life with music, crafts and theater events, many of them headed by the Boston Parks and Recreation Department.
Through its ParkARTS program, an umbrella term for its performing and participatory arts programming, the department enlivens pockets of green space across the city, bringing arts workshops, concerts, movies and puppet shows to city-run parks year-round, with a more concentrated calendar in the summer months, all free of charge.
It’s “a super exciting way for us to activate parks in a broad swath of the city,” said Elizabeth Sullivan, director of external affairs for the department.
Sullivan estimates that the city’s music programming began in the 1970s while ParkARTS is a more recent bundling of all the city’s arts initiatives, which were grouped to make promotion easier. ParkARTS introduces attendees to neighborhoods they may never have frequented, she said, and exposes artists to new audiences.
Part
of the department’s programming includes arts and crafts workshops for
children led by local artists. At various locations around Boston,
residents and their children can participate in “high-quality arts
projects” through mid-August just steps away or across the street from
their front yards, Sullivan said.
“So
not only does it allow us to activate our [parks] and enrich the lives
of children, but it also allows us to support local practitioners and
artists in the community,” she added.
One
of those artists, Carmen Powell, was initially tapped by the city to
host a limited number of events. That first collaboration turned into a
longstanding partnership. Powell has since led dozens of acrylic,
watercolor and face painting workshops in playgrounds and parks in
several neighborhoods, including downtown, Brighton, and Jamaica Plain.
This
summer, her focus has been 2-hour-long workshops for children of all
ages, taking place in two locations every day for six weeks from 10 a.m.
to noon. Powell said the Parks and Recreation Department gives her the
flexibility to choose how she wants to structure the workshops. In turn,
she provides participants with the same space to be creative and
express themselves.
“I
think that people really enjoy playing with it and getting to
experience it on their own, and not really having someone say, ‘Do it
this way or that way,’” she said.
While
she brings templates that children can use to trace images, most
participants want to experiment. The kids have fashioned characters out
of paper bags and made sea creatures out of muffin cups. Apart from
paints, Powell also brings chalk and clay for the kids, mediums that
make for easy cleanup, she admitted.
The
programming “brings people together in the community. It brings people
to these really beautiful public spaces,” Powell said. “Some people
don’t always go to some of these spaces in general, but sometimes they
may just use them in one kind of way. So it’s another way of thinking
about how that space could be used…. And I mean, art is such a peaceful
activity.”
These
events serve more than just the attendees. For Parks and Recreation,
partnering with local artists is what makes ParkARTS possible, since the
department doesn’t have the internal bandwidth to lead all the
programming, Sullivan said.
For local artists like Powell, these events offer much-needed income and a chance to network.
“We’re
dependent on these types of opportunities in order to survive,” Powell
said. By participating in ParkARTS programs, she has received inquiries
from other agencies who wanted her to lead similar events. “And so it
helps to build yourself as an artist by getting … more recognized and
creating more opportunities to earn a living,” she said.
ParkARTS also includes a variety of song and dance gatherings.
Now
through the end of August, the Citywide Neighborhood Concert Series
sees various artists bring their talents to parks across Boston. Yoron
Israel and High Standards are set to play in Roxbury’s Highland Park on
Aug. 4, and E Water Band is scheduled to brighten up Hunt-Almont Park in
Mattapan the following day.
Running
every Thursday until Aug. 15 is the Tito Puente Latin Music Series,
which began as a joint effort between nonprofit Inquilinos Boricuas en
Acción and the city to activate O’Day Playground in the South End.
Former
Berklee College of Music employees were tasked with leading the effort
and decided that music that celebrated the culture surrounding O’Day
Playground would be the ideal way to animate the space, said Abria
Smith, director for city and community engagement in the Office of
Community Government Relations at Berklee.
The
ensuing series started as a couple of Latin Music concerts in the South
End and has since expanded to an annual, citywide series in Jamaica
Plain, Mission Hill, East Boston, downtown and Boston Common.
When putting together the
lineup for the music series, Smith said she looks for bands who can play
danceable music “because these concerts are just wonderful outdoor
parties where people come expecting to dance and just enjoy the music
for an hour and a half or two.” She keeps
the programming fresh each year by inviting new artists and showcasing
Berklee alumni talent. It’s important to her, she said, to allow
audiences to experience music in a way they maybe haven’t before.
“Not
only are the arts kind of like a universal language that connects
people, it’s like there are a lot of people who don’t normally have
access to the arts,” Smith said. “So it’s definitely great to be able to
provide access to folks, and not [only] to the arts, but to really,
really high-quality performances.”
The
partnership with the Parks and Recreation Department has streamlined
the process of organizing the annual Tito Puente Latin Music Series, she
added. The department takes care of permitting, sound engineers,
staging, portable toiletries, water trucks and other logistical details.
IBA and Berklee focus on the music.
The
Parks and Recreation Department knows what summer arts programming is
popular and sticks to it for the most part, with some tinkering here and
there to allow for new partnerships, Sullivan said. For example, for
one of its upcoming ParkARTS outdoor movie nights on Aug. 12, the
department will collaborate with childhood educators who will provide
science instruction before a showing of “A Million Miles Away.”
On
Aug. 19 and 27, the city will screen “Aquaman and the Lost Kingdom” and
“Wish” at Malcolm X Park in Roxbury and Ronan Park in Dorchester
respectively.
Much of
ParkARTS programming depends on what community members want to see.
Sullivan said her department visits different neighborhoods to seek
input on details as small as what movie to show at an outdoor screening
or as big as which artists to invite for a summer concert. It’s a
“two-way street,” she said, in which the department tries to listen to
each community and meet its needs by offering events that appeal to
people of different cultures and ages.
“We’re
really lucky to have those relationships,” Sullivan said, “because that
means when people are a part of creating the program, then they’re much
more likely to come out and enjoy it.”