city_hall

Official websites use .boston.gov

A .boston.gov website belongs to an official government organization in the City of Boston.

lock

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS

A lock or https:// means you've safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Hyde Square Public Art Project

The City of Boston commissioned artists Cristina Parreño Alonso and Amin Tadj to create a piece of public art at the intersection of Centre Street, Perkins Street, and Day Street in Hyde Square.

Have questions? Contact:

Project Phase

timeline-graphic
timeline-graphic
timeline-graphic
timeline-graphic
timeline-graphic
Pending
Planning
Design
Construction
Complete

Project Information

Location
Hyde Square Intersection of Centre Street, Perkins Street, and Day Street Jamaica Plain 02130
See all
Project Features
Public Art
See all
Expected Year to be Completed
To be determined
Artist
Cristina Parreño Alonso and Amin Tadj
Primary Project Type
Arts and Culture

This project is currently in the fabrication phase.

Project Details

Project Context

In August 2016, the City of Boston released a Request for Proposals (RFP) for the public art project. The project was a collaboration between: 

The budget for the public art project is $300,000. The City selected artists Cristina Parreño and Amin Tadj to carry out the project. It is expected to be installed in late spring 2023.

Project Site

The project complements the reconstruction of Hyde Square at the intersection of Centre Street, Perkins Street, and Day StreetEnhancements include:

  • increased sidewalk widths
  • traffic and pedestrian safety improvements
  • new lighting, and
  • landscaping.
Design goals and community values

A major goal of this project is to create a sense of place and enhance the public realm with artwork.

Based on community feedback, the City asked artists to submit proposals for artwork that celebrates the multi­generational and diverse populations and cultures of Hyde Square. At public meetings held to discuss this project, individuals valued the neighborhood's positivity, desirability, access to green space and nature, and diversity. The community also expressed values that they think are important to the neighborhood:

  • freedom of expression
  • investment in the community
  • resistance to gentrification
  • amenable to families, and
  • face-to-­face interactions between neighbors.

Rendering of second installation element of Deep Time Stories, courtesy of the artists.

About the artwork

The artwork is titled, "Deep Time Stories of Jamaica Plain." It's an urban storytelling device. It explores methods of “deep time intervention” and how these can leave lasting legacies in a public space. The artists developed three artifacts for the site. These correspond to the Square’s three main points. Each artifact is a different material combination that acts as a medium for storytelling.

Watch the artist talk in English

Mira a la charla de artistas en español

The first artifact, "Future Fossil", is an earth-casting piece. It is meant to transmit stories at a:

  • human scale through oral storytelling, and
  • a geological scale through fossils from this area that are cast in place.

The second artifact is "Story Rock". The material is one of the first canvases that humans ever used for writing, stone. A variety of stories of this place will be carved in a big Roxbury conglomerate stone. The stone has been in Jamaica Plain for the past 600 million years.

The third artifact, "New Immortals", is a message to the future. The material of the whole base here is plastiglomerate. Plastiglomerate is a new type of rock announced in 2014 by the geological society of America. Here, plastiglomerate becomes an emblem of the intersection of human and geological processes.

Deep Time Stories rendering
Deep Time Stories rendering, courtesy of the artist.

Meet the Artists

Meet the Artists

Cristina Parreño headshot

Cristina Parreño Alonso

Artist, Hyde Square public art project


Cristina Parreño Alonso is an architect, designer, and educator at the School of Architecture and Planning at MIT where her research Transtectonics explores cultural and environmental implications of expanded temporal sensibilities in architectural material practice. Her tectonic translations — material transfers across mediums and temporal scales, human and more-than-human — embody narratives that are told in the form of essays, exhibitions, and through architectural projects and installations that activate public spaces.

She was commissioned for the Hyde Square public art project with Amin Tadj.

Amin Tadj headshot

Amin Tadj

Artist, Hyde Square public art project


Amin Tadj received his Master’s degree in Architecture from the University of Tehran. He co-founded VAVStudio in Iran in 2003, through which he has designed and executed numerous public and private projects. His projects have earned him several national and international awards and recognition and have been showcased in several exhibitions, including Venice Biennale 2016 and Seoul Biennale of Architecture and Urbanism in 2017. In 2011 he was invited to MIT as a victor scholar, where he met Cristina and started his collaboration with her on several architectural and art projects and competitions.

Amin was commissioned for the Hyde Square public art project with Cristina Parreño.

Back to top