Lecture

Musa Mayer: In Conversation

Saturday, May 7, 2022
11:00 am–12:00 pm
Harry and Mildred Remis Auditorium (Auditorium 161) and Online

This event is on site at the Museum and livestreamed online.

Tickets are required for either option.

In-Person TicketsLivestream Tickets

Members
Free
Nonmembers
Free
Add to Calendar 2022-05-07 11:00:00 2022-05-07 12:00:00 Musa Mayer: In Conversation | 05/07/2022, 11 am–Noon Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 465 Huntington Ave, Boston, MA 02115, USA Museum of Fine Arts, Boston tickets@mfa.org America/New_York public

To celebrate the opening of “Philip Guston Now,” Musa Mayer, Guston’s daughter and president of The Guston Foundation, joins Ann and Graham Gund Director Matthew Teitelbaum to discuss the artist’s life, how the foundation is working to make his legacy accessible to the public, and how they’re honoring his desire for a more equitable world.

Musa Mayer, president, The Guston Foundation, and daughter of Philip Guston
Matthew Teitelbaum, Ann and Graham Gund Director

Accessing the Livestream

Once you have reserved tickets to the livestream, you may access it on the Video Content page at the start of the event. Log in using the same account that you used to reserve the tickets.

Ticket Information

To order tickets by phone, call 1-800-440-6975 ($6 processing fee applies); to order in person, visit any MFA ticket desk.

Ticketing Policies

Auditorium Mask Policy

Masks are optional, but visitors are no longer required to wear them while attending events in Remis Auditorium and Alfond Auditorium.

Sponsors

“Philip Guston Now” is sponsored by the Ford Foundation. Generously supported by Musa and Thomas Mayer and The Guston Foundation, the Carl and Ruth Shapiro Family Foundation, the Bafflin Foundation, the Terra Foundation for American Art, Lisbeth Tarlow and Stephen Kay, Marilyn and Charles Baillie, Martin S. Kaplan and Wendy Tarlow Kaplan, Michael Nesbitt, Phil Lind, and an anonymous donor. With gratitude to the Council for Canadian American Relations. The exhibition is supported by an indemnity from the Federal Council on the Arts and the Humanities.