The Athenaeum will be closed on Monday, May 25, for Memorial Day and will resume regular business hours on Tuesday, May 26.

03.09.2026

Still Marching 1970 – 2017 with Liane Brandon

Groundbreaking filmmaker, photographer, and Professor Emerita Liane Brandon presented Still Marching 1970-2017; which featured her historic photographs documenting two landmark Boston women’s marches held nearly 50 years apart. Through her images and personal recollections, Brandon offered a unique perspective on both events – as participant and observer – while reflecting on the early days of the Women’s Movement. On March 8, 1970, Brandon, then a member of Bread and Roses of Cambridge – one of the nation’s earliest women’s liberation organizations – photographed the International Women’s Day march. It was the largest demonstration for women’s equality in Massachusetts since the Boston Suffrage March of 1914. Her photographs are believed to be the only existing color images of that historic event. Nearly five decades later, on January 21, 2017, Brandon returned with her camera to document the Women’s March for America. An estimated 175,000 people gathered on Boston Common the day after Donald Trump’s inauguration, joining similar marches in more than 600 cities nationwide where nearly six million Americans demonstrated for women’s rights, healthcare reform, reproductive rights, LGBTQ rights, and racial equality. Brandon’s photographs capture the events and issues that still resonate in women’s ongoing fight for equality – and revealing the enduring spirit, energy, and determination of those who continue to march.

About the Speaker

Liane Brandon is an award winning independent filmmaker, photographer and University of Massachusetts/Amherst Professor Emerita. She was one of the first independent women filmmakers to emerge from the Women’s Movement. She is a co-founder of New Day Films and was a member of Bread and Roses, one of the earliest “women’s liberation” collectives in Massachusetts. Her groundbreaking films Sometimes I Wonder Who I Am (1970), Anything You Want To Be (1971), and Betty Tells Her Story (1972), were among the most frequently used consciousness raising tools of the Women’s Movement. Her films, which also include Once Upon A Choice (1980) and How To Prevent A Nuclear War (1987), have won numerous national and international awards, and have been featured on HBOCinemax and the Criterion Channel. They have twice received Blue Ribbons at the American Film Festival, and have been presented at the Museum of Modern Art, the Barbican Centre in London, the Tribeca Film Festival and many other venues worldwide. Her film Betty Tells Her Story was inducted into the National Film Registry in 2022. Currently working as a photographer, her credits include stills for the PBS series American ExperienceNova, and American Masters. Her photos have been published in The New York Times, the Los Angeles Times, the Boston Globe and many other publications. Actively involved with the rights of media artists, her lawsuit (Brandon v. The Regents of the University of California) won a landmark victory for filmmakers’; protection of their titles. Brandon’s historic films and papers are held in the Archive of Documentary Arts at Duke University. Her films are in active distribution through New Day Films. Before becoming a filmmaker and professor, Brandon worked as a ski instructor, lifeguard, waitress, high school teacher and professional stunt woman.

03.06.2026

Interview with Storyteller & Artist Vita Murrow

Athenaeum Member Author Vita Murrow

February 2026

The Athenaeum is pleased to spotlight storyteller and artist Vita Murrow. Her work has been shaped by
a life of diverse cultural experiences, disciplines, and creative communities. Born in India and raised in
Minneapolis, she carries a deep sense of belonging to both places—an influence that shines through in
her writing. With a background spanning visual art, education, film, and children’s media, Murrow
approaches writing as an act of truth-telling, risk-taking, and exploring storytelling traditions from across
the globe. Her new book, The Little Book of Love, is a representation of this work and of Murrow
herself—showcasing the joy of love across languages and cultures.

Q: When and where were you born and raised?

I was born in Maharashtra, India and raised in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Both places are a warm hug of
belonging for me. Whether it’s my stovetop chai ritual and playlists of south Asian creatives and artists.
Or my love of winter and hidden Minnesota accent. (Want a “Pop” with that “hot dish?”).

Q: Tell me about your educational background?

I’ve long been a student of the arts. I grew up playing the harp, studying classical Indian Dance (Kathak)
and performing in community theater. After graduating from an Arts High School, I took a gap-year to
complete a term of national service. It was then that I discovered a love for schools and teaching
literacy. In the years that followed I nurtured two paths as a scholar. One as a studio artist earning a BFA
in Art school in Seattle. And another, as an educator receiving a master’s in teaching and literacy in NYC.

Q: What sort of work experience do you have? Did that experience influence your writing?

Having two paths as a student meant two paths as a professional. I’ve had the pleasure of serving as a
literacy clinician and directing school partnerships here in greater Boston. I co-wrote and created a short
Film (‘Dust’ Official selection in the 2008 NYFF), worked in the films department at Sesame Street and
trained as a stop motion animator. In all these settings I’ve had the opportunity to be a consumer of
media for children, and a creator. It’s connected me to the tradition and culture of storytelling in rich and varied ways. All of it influences me as a writer. I’m committed to telling the truth in my work and
that means understanding where I have come from. Interrogating the norms I hold presently. And
pushing myself to ask new questions and take risks. Writing is a lot like directing, which is a lot like
teaching, which is a lot of collaboration, which is the heart of my creative process. It’s all connected for
me.

Q: What is your favorite stop-motion film?

My favorite piece of classic stop motion film has to be one of my earliest experiences with the medium:
“A version of The Wind in the Willows from the 80’s.” A contemporary stop-motion piece that I continue to be inspired by is Passengers by Argentinian filmmaker Juan Pablo Zaramella, made from the aluminum material that covers wine bottles, pretty incredible work! I am of course deeply influenced by the work of Aardman Animations Studio in the UK where I studied. Creators of Wallace and Gromit, Shaun the Sheep and Creature Comforts to name a few of their iconic collections. Certainly the work of Portland’s Laika Studio: films like Coraline, Missing Link. Skellington Studio’s “The Nightmare Before Christmas,” and Shadow Machine’s Oscar winning Pinocchio.

Q: How did you find the Athenaeum?

When we moved here from NYC my mother-in-law was a member, and she would take our kids here
when they were little. Then a few years ago I had the delight of accepting a Massachusetts book award
honor at the State House. After the ceremony, some writer friends and I popped across to explore the
Athenaeum. I was applying for a grant at the time, and thought ‘If I get it, I’ll put some of it towards a membership’. In the end I didn’t get the grant but thought instead; “forget that I’m going to be a
member any way!”

Q: What appeals to you about the Athenaeum? 

I love being in downtown Boston. I had an office nearby for years, our kids went to school in Beacon
Hill, I feel continually inspired by the skyline, the parks, the people and the history. I am eager to support
cultural institutions in the area. To be a member of the Athenaeum is a way for me to honor the value of
scholarship, the work of writers, and invest in my community.

Q: What is your favorite spot in the building?

I love working on the quiet fifth-floor and having the sunset beside me in the winter. Or sitting on
terraces for lunch in warmer seasons. But my favorite spot must be the seating on the second floor
beside the statue of Nathaniel Bowditch because… his name marks my street! I live near where his son,
Jonathan Ingersoll Bowditch, had his home in Boston. I like to think that the Bowditch legacy of
exploration lingers in my own home. What were the great struggles of working on The Little Book of Love? The great joys?

The hardest part of working on the Little Book of Love was knowing we couldn’t represent all 7,000+
languages that mean so much, to so many, all over the world. The great joy of writing the book was
delving into the many words and the ways we are vulnerable with our feelings. Writing about love is
joyful! We should all be so lucky. An added joy was working with Illustrator Annelies Draws. I relished
sharing notes and mood boards with her and am so grateful for her incredible contributions as an artist
and visual storyteller.

Q: Do you have any projects on the horizon that you’re able to talk about here?

I am currently working on a graphic novel, together with my husband, Artist Ethan Murrow. As well as a
highly illustrated series with my publishing partners in the UK. Readers can also look forward to another
title centering kid empowerment. I also have a short film in development as a writer director.

03.04.2026

Starry and Restless: Three Women Who Changed Work, Writing, and the World by Julia Cooke

She hid on a Red Cross boat to reach Omaha Beach on D-Day. She walked the abandoned streets of Hong Kong to take food to her daughter’s father, a prisoner of war. She fought off the advances of overzealous Yugoslavian diplomats, found overlooked details of world history in a dentist’s kitchen in Sarajevo. She traveled alone to Mexico. She traveled alone to Congo. She traveled alone to the American South. She married Hemingway. She married a Chinese poet-playboy-publisher, then married a British war hero. She fell in love with H. G. Wells. She gave birth and raised a child on her own. She landed on the front page of the newspaper. She wrote for the great magazines of her time—Vogue, The New Yorker, Harper’s Bazaar. She wrote a play. She wrote a memoir. She wrote a genre-breaking travel narrative. She wrote bestsellers. She wrote and wrote and wrote. She changed the very way we think about writing and the way journalists craft stories—which sources are viable, which details are important—and the way women move and work in the world. She was Martha Gellhorn. She was Emily “Mickey” Hahn. She was Rebecca West. Each woman was starry-eyed for success, for adventure, and helped ensure that other starry and restless women could make unforgettable lives for themselves. They fought for their lives and their work. They were praised and criticized for it all. In language as lively and nimble, in passages as intimate and adventurous, and with conviction as fierce and indefatigable as her subjects’ own, Julia Cooke’s Starry and Restless plays out the stories of three women across three decades and five continents. Martha, Mickey, Rebecca—journalists, authors, mothers, lovers, friends. These women didn’t just bear witness to the great changes of the twentieth century; their curiosity, grit, ambition, and stories changed the world.

About the Speakers

Julia Cooke is the author of the books Come Fly the World, a Goodreads Choice Awards finalist and a Malala’s Book Club pick, and The Other Side of Paradise. Her essays have been published in A Public Space, Salon, The Threepenny Review, Smithsonian, Tin House, and Virginia Quarterly Review, and her reporting has been published in Condé Nast Traveler, The New York Times, Playboy, and more. She holds an MFA from Columbia University.

Nina MacLaughlin is the award-winning author of Wake, Siren (FSG), a finalist for a Lambda Literary Award and the Massachusetts Book Award; the acclaimed memoir Hammer Head (W.W. Norton), a finalist for the New England Book Award; as well as Summer Solstice and the bestselling Winter Solstice (Black Sparrow), winner of the Massachusetts Book Award. She writes a newsletter on New England literary news, and her work has appeared in The Virginia Quarterly Review, n+1, AGNI, The Believer, The Paris Review Daily, The New York Times Book Review, American Short Fiction, the Los Angeles Review of Books, Meatpaper, and elsewhere. She lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

03.02.2026

Puzzling Perfection: Reminiscing About Edward Gorey with Anne Bromer

The adjectives used to describe Edward Gorey seem almost endless: visionary, gothic, frivolous, solitary, flamboyant, odd—and genius. To this list, Anne Bromer adds two more: generous and delightful. Anne had the privilege of collaborating with Gorey on five book-related projects in the mid-1980s and 1990s, including two miniature books, two posters for the Boston Antiquarian Book Fair, and a cover illustration for a Bromer Booksellers catalogue. Gorey was meticulous and exacting in his work, and the results of that dedication have captivated millions of readers worldwide. Long a cult figure, Gorey reached an even broader audience through his iconic sets for Masterpiece Theatre on PBS and his Tony Award–winning costume designs for Dracula on Broadway. These works —along with his swooning Victorian ladies and doomed toddlers—have become enduring fixtures of popular culture. Anne Bromer shared her personal experiences working with the legendary author and artist Edward Gorey.

About the Speaker

Anne Bromer is the author of Strings Attached, a biography of Dorothy Abbe, and of Miniature Books: 4000 Years of Tiny Treasures. Anne and her husband began Bromer Booksellers in the 1960s and were located in Copley Square for 45 years. At the end of 2024, Anne closed the business, having traveled the world buying and selling rare books for sixty years. During the decades she met fascinating people, none more curious and special than Edward Gorey. Anne says “being welcomed into his world for more than a decade was an honor”.

02.25.2026

Designing America: Richard Morris Hunt’s Vision for a New Gilded Age

This virtual discussion examined Richard Morris Hunt’s expansive architectural vision for a new Gilded Age, considering both his formative, familial, and professional connections to Boston and the ways in which these relationships informed such landmark projects as The Breakers and Marble House in Newport, Rhode Island. It also assessed his now-lost Boston commissions as significant, if overlooked, touchpoints that illuminate the city’s role in shaping the cultural ambitions and architectural innovations of the Gilded Age.

About the Speakers

Dr. Catherine Moran is an art & cultural historian whose research explores the intersection between material culture, architecture, and identity as an expression of the human experience. Catherine has over ten years of experience as a lecturer of art and design history at the College of Visual and Performing arts at The University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth, and is the former Gallery Director for Bernard and S. Dean Levy, New York. She is engaged with local cultural, historic preservation, and arts based non-profit organizations and has lectured at several local universities, professional conferences, and cultural institutions. Catherine currently serves as the Manager of Academic Partnerships and Research Fellows Program at The Preservation Society of Newport County.

Tiziana Dearing is the host of WBUR’s Morning Edition. Prior to helping listeners start the morning with news from around the corner and around the world, Tiziana hosted Radio Boston, WBUR’s daily local magazine, for five years. Tiziana came to journalism after a career that spanned academia, nonprofits and for-profit management consulting. She taught graduate students at the Boston College School of Social Work and chaired its program in Social Innovation and Leadership. Tiziana ran a start-up foundation focused on breaking generational cycles of poverty in Boston neighborhoods and was the first woman president of Catholic Charities for the Archdiocese of Boston. Earlier in her work life, she ran a research center at the Harvard Kennedy School and worked in management consulting. Tiziana has won a number of awards in the city, including a Pinnacle Award from the Greater Boston Chamber of Commerce and Boston Business Journal’s 40 Under 40.

This talk was presented in partnership with the Institute of Classical Architecture and Art and The Preservation Society of Newport County.

02.18.2026

George Washington’s Library, Lifelong Learning, & Citizenship with Lindsay Chervinsky

In this talk Dr. Lindsay M. Chervinsky, Executive Director of the George Washington Presidential Library, shared George Washington’s reading habits and his life-long quest to improve his knowledge. She also explored Washington’s dedication to supporting education institutions and his belief that an educated citizenry was essential to the future of the republic.

About the Speaker

Dr. Lindsay M. Chervinsky is a presidential historian and Executive Director of the George Washington Presidential Library at Mount Vernon. Dr. Chervinsky is the author of the award-winning books Making the Presidency: John Adams and the Precedents that Forged the Republic and The Cabinet: George Washington and the Creation of an American Institution, and co-editor of Mourning the Presidents: Loss and Legacy in American Culture. Dr. Chervinsky regularly writes for public audiences in publications like the Washington PostTIMEUSA TodayCNNThe Wall Street Journal and provides commentary and historical context for outlets like CBS NewsC-SPANFace the Nation, the New York Times, and NPR.

02.17.2026

The Reconstruction Diary of Frances Anne Rollin by Jennifer Putzi

In 1867, Frances Anne Rollin, a Black writer and teacher from South Carolina, traveled to Boston to seek a publisher for her biography of famed Black abolitionist, writer, and Civil War veteran Martin R. Delany. Beginning in January 1868, Rollin kept a diary while in Boston documenting her progression on Delany’s biography, negotiations with publishers, visits from friends, attendance at lectures and readings, and her marriage to William J. Whipper, a Black politician and jurist. Rollin’s diary is one of the earliest known diaries by a Southern Black woman. In this critical edition Jennifer Putzi offers the first complete transcription and annotation of Rollin’s diary, along with a robust introduction providing important biographical, historical, cultural, and literary contexts for readers. Rollin’s diary provides one of the fullest pictures of an African American woman as an author, activist, and well-connected and politically involved individual during the Reconstruction era—filling a gap in the literature and scholarly analysis of such preserved works by nineteenth-century African American women.

About the Speaker

Jennifer Putzi is a Professor of English and Gender, Sexuality, & Women’s Studies at William & Mary. Her research and teaching are broadly focused on nineteenth-century American women’s writing. She is the author or editor of seven books, including most recently The Reconstruction Diary of Frances Anne Rollin: A Critical Edition (2025) and Fair Copy: Gender, Relational Poetics, and Antebellum American Women’s Poetry (2021). Her current research is on nineteenth-century African American women’s diaries and the relationship between material format and content in Black women’s everyday writing. Professor Putzi’s book-in-progress, titled Making Space: Geography and Material Form in African American Women’s Diaries, considers the way nineteenth-century Black women diarists use their diaries to negotiate, claim, and map geographical space as gardeners, travelers, city dwellers, and invalids. Along with Professor Kirsten Lee of Auburn University, Putzi is also Project Co-Director of the Black Women’s Diaries Project, a digital humanities project that scans, transcribes, annotates, and encodes manuscript diaries written by African American women between 1854 and 1905. The BWDP site will launch in the fall of 2026, with the 1902 diary of Norfolk resident Florence Barber.

02.11.2026

Workhorse by Caroline Palmer

At the turn of the millennium, Editorial Assistant Clodagh “Clo” Harmon wants nothing more than to rise through the ranks at the world’s most prestigious fashion magazine. There’s just one problem: she doesn’t have the right pedigree. Instead, Clo is a “workhorse” surrounded by beautiful, wealthy, impossibly well-connected “show horses” who get ahead without effort, including her beguiling cubicle-mate, Davis Lawrence, the daughter of a beloved but fading Broadway actress. Harry Wood, Davis’s boarding school classmate and a reporter with visions of his own media empire, might be Clo’s ally in gaming the system—or he might be the only thing standing between Clo and her rightful place at the top. In a career punctuated by moments of high absurdity, sudden windfalls, and devastating reversals of fortune, Clo wades across boundaries, taking ever greater and more dangerous risks to become the important person she wants to be within the confines of a world where female ambition remains cloaked. But who really is Clo underneath all the borrowed designer clothes and studied manners—and who are we if we share her desires? Hilariously observant and insightful, Workhorse is a brilliant page-turner about what it means to be in thrall to wealth, beauty, and influence, and the outrageous sacrifices women must make for the sake of success.

About the Speakers

From 2014 to 2019, Caroline Palmer was the director of editorial, video, and social media at Amazon Fashion. Prior to her tenure at Amazon, she spent seven years as the editor of Vogue. Her work has appeared in various publications, including The New York Times, Life, Seventeen magazine, and Vogue. She lives in Montclair, New Jersey, with her husband and three children. Workhorse is her first novel.

Todd Plummer is a Boston-based writer and attorney. He started his career with an internship at Vogue under Caroline Palmer in 2010, and went on to work as a society reporter in New York City for five years, and a travel writer across seven continents for ten.

02.02.2026

The Rembrandt Heist: The Story of a Criminal Genius, a Stolen Masterpiece, and an Enigmatic by Anthony Amore

On April 14, 1975, Myles Connor, already a known art thief, entered the Boston Museum of Fine Arts in disguise along with a cohort. The pair went directly the Dutch Gallery and proceeded to remove Portrait of Elsbeth van Rijn from its place on the wall. After a brief scuffle with the guards—with Myles deterring his partner from shooting a bystander—the pair was gone, leaving behind no traceable evidence amidst the mayhem. Who was Myles Connor and what were his motivations? Most thieves are in it for the money, but Myles was far from most thieves. His motive was freedom. The summer before the heist, he was arrested by the FBI when he attempted to sell three highly valuable paintings by Andrew and N.C. Wyeth to an undercover agent. Incredibly, Myles did this while out on bail for possession of yet more stolen art. When he was arrested and placed in the back seat of a state police vehicle, the FBI agent said to him, “We’ve got you now. Let’s see you get out of this one.” Without batting an eye, Connor calmly replied, “Just you watch me.” Again released on bail, Connor met with an old friend of his father’s, Massachusetts State Police Major John Regan. Regan worked for the District Attorney at the time, future Congressman William Delahunt. Connor asked Regan if there was any way out of the fix he was in, and the straightlaced cop told him bluntly, “It’s going to take a Rembrandt to get you out of this one.” With that, a master plan was hatched. But there was a flip side to this story. One involving Connor’s best friend—Al Dotoli—who lived a life in the music industry, far from the world of art heists. Dotoli’s own masterpiece of a plan hinged on the Rembrandt’s return. Filled with unforgettable personalities and non-stop action and intrigue, Anthony Amore layed out the anatomy of this notorious art theft while describing not just the criminal genius that is Myles Connor, but also the complexity of personal relationships between lifelong friends. Our audience learned about a breathtaking painting by the world’s most famous artist and the incredible true story about how Portrait of Elsbeth van Rijn ended up on the wall at the MFA in the first place.

About the Speaker
Anthony Amore is a leading expert in security, investigations, and art crime. He has held senior roles with the U.S. Department of Homeland Security and served as Director of Security and Chief Investigator at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, where he continues to investigate the infamous 1990 heist of 13 famous masterpieces. A bestselling author, Amore has written four acclaimed books on art crime. His latest, The Rembrandt Heist, was recently named one of the ten best history books of 2025 by Smithsonian Magazine. He teaches at Harvard University and is a licensed private investigator and a consultant to museums, law firms, and high-net-worth clients.

01.28.2026

The Innocents of Florence: The Renaissance Discovery of Childhood by Joseph Luzzi

Reflecting in a touching preface on the major caregivers in his own life, Joseph Luzzi narrated the fascinating history of this revolutionary orphanage, offering readers the first comprehensive “biography” of a groundbreaking humanitarian institution that recognized poor and abandoned children as worthy of nurture—and thereby shaped education and childcare for generations to come. The story began with the abandonment of the newborn Agata Smeralda on February 5, 1445, in Florence’s Hospital of the Innocents, the first—but certainly not the last—child to be left at its doors. In an era when children were frequently abandoned, often trafficked or left to die on the streets, an orphanage devoted to their care and protection was a striking innovation. The Innocenti, as it has come to be called—the first orphanage in Europe devoted exclusively to unwanted children—would go on to care for nearly 400,000 young lives over the next five centuries. Built by the Silk Weavers Guild at a time when the wealthy were expected to contribute to civic life, the Innocenti featured glorious arches designed by Filippo Brunelleschi and housed works by some of the greatest artists of the Renaissance, from the painter Domenico Ghirlandaio to the sculptor Luca della Robbia. Meanwhile, the new orphanage also redefined the idea of “childhood” itself, particularly in education, as boys were often taught not just Latin and basic numeracy, but also a well-rounded curriculum that included art, literature, and music. Girls learned viable trades such as weaving and silk manufacturing, and the Innocenti assisted them in securing suitable marriages to protect them from poverty or a life of prostitution. Over the centuries, the orphanage oversaw groundbreaking scientific discoveries—it was a birthplace of modern pediatrics—while struggling against rampant disease, constant financial crises, and the dramatic ups and downs of Florentine politics in the Medici era.

About the Speaker
Joseph Luzzi (PhD Yale) is the Asher B. Edelman Professor of Literature at Bard College, where he also teaches courses on film and Italian Studies. He is the author of nine books, including his recent Botticelli’s Secret: The Lost Drawings and the Rediscovery of the Renaissance (Norton, 2022), a New Yorker Best Books of 2022 selection and shortlisted for the Phi Beta Kappa Ralph Waldo Emerson Award. His other books include Romantic Europe and the Ghost of Italy (Yale University Press, 2008), which received the MLA’s Scaglione Prize for Italian Studies; A Cinema of Poetry: Aesthetics of the Italian Art Film (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2014), a finalist for the international prize “The Bridge Book” Award; My Two Italies (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2014), a New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice; and In a Dark Wood: What Dante Taught Me About Grief, Healing, and the Mysteries of Love (HarperCollins, 2015), which has been translated into multiple languages. Joseph’s essays and reviews have appeared in the New York Times, Los Angeles Times, Chronicle of Higher Education, TLS, Bookforum, and American Scholar, among others, and his scholarly writing has appeared in PMLA, Modern Language Notes, Modern Language Quarterly, Raritan, Italica, and Studies on Voltaire and the Eighteenth Century. His media appearances include a profile in the Guardian and an interview with National Public Radio. Among his honors are a Dante Society of America essay prize, Yale College teaching prize, a National Endowment for the Humanities Public Scholars Award, and fellowships from the National Humanities Center and Yale’s Whitney Humanities Center. The first American-born child in his Italian immigrant family, Luzzi was named Cittadino Onorario / Honorary Citizen of Acri, Calabria, in 2017.