All about photo.com: photo contests, photography exhibitions, galleries, photographers, books, schools and venues.
Get published and win $1,000 enter AAP Magazine Shapes - Extended to Friday!
Get published and win $1,000 enter AAP Magazine Shapes - Extended to Friday!

Lunder Arts Center

Share
Lunder Arts Center
Lunder Arts Center
Cambridge - 1801 Massachusetts Avenue - MA 02140
The Lunder Arts Center in Cambridge, Massachusetts, stands as a dynamic hub for creativity and innovation, purpose-built to support the next generation of artists and designers. Located in the vibrant Porter Square neighborhood, this state-of-the-art facility serves as a home for students at Lesley University to explore, create, and share their artistic voices.

Inside the Lunder Arts Center, students have access to an impressive array of professionally equipped studios and labs. From traditional printmaking and photography darkrooms to digital animation and computer labs outfitted with the latest software, the center supports a wide range of artistic disciplines. Complemented by a dedicated arts library and open gallery spaces, the environment encourages deep experimentation and collaboration.

The center hosts a year-round calendar of exhibitions in the Roberts, Raizes, and VanDernoot Galleries, where visitors can encounter the work of acclaimed international artists alongside that of faculty, alumni, and emerging student talent. These exhibitions are more than displays—they are interactive experiences that invite students to participate in curating, installing, and even meeting visiting artists, fostering real-world skills and meaningful connections.

Student work is consistently celebrated and displayed in campus galleries, including a public exhibition space on the third floor of the Porter Exchange Building. These opportunities provide valuable professional experience and affirm the center’s commitment to visibility and engagement.

Notably, the Lunder Arts Center serves as a bridge between the university and the wider Cambridge community. Past exhibitions have sparked conversation and reflection, such as those featuring the work of Irving Penn or art by individuals on the autism spectrum. Through this rich programming, the Lunder Arts Center becomes not just a place for making art, but a catalyst for dialogue, learning, and cultural exchange.

Website

Our printed edition showcases the winners of AAP Magazine call of entries
All About Photo Magazine
Issue #48
Stay up-to-date  with call for entries, deadlines and other news about exhibitions, galleries, publications, & special events.
Advertisement
AAP Magazine #50 Shapes
Win a Solo Exhibition this September
AAP Magazine #50: Shapes
Call for Entries
AAP Magazine #50: Shapes
Publish your work in AAP Magazine and win $1,000 Cash Prizes

Related Articles

Landscape and Alchemy
Landscape and Alchemy brings together the evocative works of Katja Liebmann and Nadezda Nikolova in a contemplative dialogue between place, memory, and photographic transformation. Rooted in early photographic processes, Liebmann’s cyanotypes and Nikolova’s wet plate collodion images transcend straightforward landscape depiction to become meditations on time, perception, and the elemental.
The Echo of Our Voices: The Day May Break, Chapter Four
Nick Brandt presents a new photography book to be published by Skira Editore with a launch at his new solo exhibition at Hangar Art Center in September
Pathfinders: Ilse Bing, Kati Horna, Dora Maar
Huxley-Parlour are pleased to announce Pathfinders, an exhibition presenting important photographic works by Ilse Bing, Kati Horna and Dora Maar. Though shaped by different trajectories, these three artists shared an acute sensitivity to modern life: its velocity, its fragmentation, and its dislocations. Working in the shadow of political upheaval, each turned their camera toward the street, the surreal, and the overlooked, forging a new visual language for the Modern age.
Yancey Richardson: Celebrating 30 Years
Yancey Richardson is proud to celebrate the gallery’s 30-year anniversary with a milestone exhibition bringing together works by all of the gallery’s exhibited artists and estates. Titled Celebrating 30 Years and co-curated by the artists themselves, the exhibition features works that speak across decades and through varying styles and technical approaches, highlighting the breadth and diversity of the gallery’s roster and its steadfast commitment to supporting artists working in photography and lens-based media.
Unseen Narratives: Through the Lens of Contemporary Photography
Unseen Narratives explores the hidden, the subconscious, and the forgotten, tracing their imprints through contemporary photography. This exhibition unfolds as a journey into the most remote corners of human psychology, exposing social and historical issues, themes of identity, and the unseen layers of everyday life. Bringing together three artists from different generations and diverse practices, the show unravels the psychological intricacies of human nature, revealing images that linger beneath the surface of collective memory.
RPS’ 166th International Photography Exhibition
The Royal Photographic Society Announces Photographers Selected from over 4000 for the 166th International Photography Exhibition (IPE) – the World’s Longest-running Photography Exhibition
All About Photo Presents ’ Street Photography At The End Of The 80s’ by Henk Kosche
Tucked away in a small cardboard box, a collection of 35mm negatives sat untouched for nearly four decades. For photographer Henk Kosche, these forgotten strips of film—once destined for the darkroom—became time capsules of a world on the brink of profound transformation. With analog processes fading into memory and digital archives multiplying, the box might have remained closed. But as Kosche puts it, “At some point, the past catches up with you.” Inside, he found photographic treasures that now form the heart of his latest exhibition: Street Photography at the End of the '80s.
Queer Havens
Queer Havens is an exhibition of more than 40 works that explores what safe spaces look like, how they are built, and what they mean to the people who create and inhabit them. Co-curated with Pride Photo, the exhibition brings together twelve powerful photographic projects—six from the World Press Photo archive and six from Pride Photo—each offering a distinct lens on what it means to find or make safety as an LGBTQIA+ person today.
Cherry Grove Archives Collection announces 2025 summer programming
The Cherry Grove Archives Collection promotes global appreciation of the rich and creative history of the earliest known haven for LGBTQ+ people and their allies in the United States. The CGAC is dedicated to the preservation of the social, political and cultural history of Cherry Grove, Fire Island, New York. It’s their mission to collect, preserve and share this history through the archival protection and storage of Cherry Grove's historic artifacts, including documents, photographs and film. “Save the past. Make it last.”
Call for Entries
AAP Magazine #50: Shapes
Get International Exposure and Connect with Industry Insiders