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Online• Jun 24, 2026

Come as You Are: “Better Angels” by Heather Kapplow, June 26–28

Heather Kapplow’s Better Angels, commissioned by the Boston Public Art Triennial, is a pop-up public artwork traveling across Boston’s public spaces from June to October 2026. Join the artist for the opening reception this weekend at Atlantic Wharf.

Review by Boston Public Art Triennial (Partner Post)

Heather Kapplow, "Better Angels," installation view, 2026. Photo by Dominic Chavez. Courtesy of the Boston Public Art Triennial.

Heather Kapplow, "Better Angels," installation view, 2026. Photo by Dominic Chavez. Courtesy of the Boston Public Art Triennial.

Boston, MA, June 24, 2026 — Better Angels, a traveling large-scale public artwork by Boston-based conceptual artist Heather Kapplow, will pop up across Boston’s iconic parks, plazas, and public spaces from June through October 2026. The installation, commissioned by the Boston Public Art Triennial (The Triennial), is a playful invitation for viewers to envision their best selves with a fellow participant as witness, offering moments of grace when we fall short.

With large, campy inflatable clouds, golden gates to heaven, and a cast of “angels” performed by local artists, Better Angels humorously yet earnestly reminds visitors that democracy has always required us to navigate personal and collective aspirations, the challenges that keep us from them, and work together toward ideals beyond our lifetimes.

All are welcome at the first pop-up location at Atlantic Wharf, 290 Congress Street, June 26 through 28, and the artwork’s opening reception on Friday, June 26, from 5:00–7:00 p.m.

Better Angels at Atlantic Wharf hours:

Friday, June 26: 12:00–7:00 p.m
Saturday, June 27: 12:00–7:00 p.m.
Sunday, June 28: 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.

Through a facilitated engagement at the gates of heaven, visitors reflect on an ideal they strive toward and what holds them back from achieving it. After sharing with a partner-visitor as witness, Pete, Head of Security, accepts the pair into heaven via a decree and official paperwork before they walk through the installation, emerging with a new perspective. The project invites us to envision our best selves for one another, the city, and the nation during the United States’ Semiquincentennial.

“Better Angels builds on the Triennial’s history of commissioning participatory public art that invites personal and collective reflection and carries these values forward into the present moment with wry humor and grace,” says The Triennial Executive Director Kate Gilbert.

“Though this history won’t be explicit when people are engaging with the piece, the title of the project conjures Abraham Lincoln’s failed appeal for unity on the eve of the Civil War. It’s there in the background of the experience to remind us that the promises of 1776 couldn’t even carry the nation to its first centennial without rupture. And suggesting that it takes all of us acknowledging our weaknesses, and seeking out the best in ourselves and in one another for the nation to find a healthy future shape,” says artist Heather Kapplow.

“Amid renewed political polarization and racialized conflict, Better Angels draws on Boston’s revolutionary ground to trace a through line from 1776 to 1861 to today,” says The Triennial Assistant Curator Jasper Sanchez. “It reminds us that democracy has always required navigating profound disagreement, and that progress depends on a collective striving toward our best selves.”

A full calendar of Better Angels sites, dates, and times is available at thetriennial.org/events.

ABOUT HEATHER KAPPLOW

Heather/Hey There Kapplow is a self-trained conceptual artist based in the USA. Kapplow creates participatory experiences using installation, sound, objects, text, engagement and other strategies to convert audiences into collaborators and complex, hard-to-answer questions into tenderly co-held things, invested with transformative collective care. Kapplow has been awarded numerous grants, residencies and fellowships, and has had work commissioned for galleries and festivals within the USA and internationally. Most notably, performing at Venice Biennale, Supermarket Art Fair, ARoS Kunstmuseum, ANTI-Festival, Guggenheim Museum, Museo Arte Moderno and the Queens Museum; within works by Guillermo Gómez-Peña and On Kawara, among others.

ABOUT BOSTON PUBLIC ART TRIENNIAL

Boston Public Art Triennial is the city’s first and only public art organization dedicated to supporting artists and communities in bold, contemporary, public art with annual artwork commissions and an every-three-year citywide exhibition. The Triennial’s mission is to foster relationships between artists and the public to create bold public art experiences that open minds, conversations, and spaces across Boston, resulting in a more open, equitable, and vibrant city.

Boston Public Art Triennial (Partner Post)

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