place

James Blake House

Boston Registered Historic Place stubsBoston building and structure stubsHistoric house museums in MassachusettsHouses completed in 1661Houses in Boston
Houses on the National Register of Historic Places in Suffolk County, MassachusettsLandmarks in Dorchester, BostonMassachusetts museum stubsMuseums in BostonNational Register of Historic Places in BostonVague or ambiguous time from June 2014
James Blake House, Dorchester, Massachusetts exterior
James Blake House, Dorchester, Massachusetts exterior

The James Blake House is the oldest surviving house in Boston, Massachusetts, United States. The house was built in 1661 and the date was confirmed by dendrochronology in 2007. Dorchester Atheneum. Retrieved on 2017-09-13. It is located at 735 Columbia Road, in Edward Everett Square, and just a block from Massachusetts Avenue. The Dorchester Historical Society now owns the building and tours are given on the third Sunday of the month.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article James Blake House (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

James Blake House
East Cottage Street, Boston Dorchester

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
placeShow on map

Wikipedia: James Blake HouseContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 42.319641666667 ° E -71.060291666667 °
placeShow on map

Address

East Cottage Street 205
02125 Boston, Dorchester
Massachusetts, United States
mapOpen on Google Maps

James Blake House, Dorchester, Massachusetts exterior
James Blake House, Dorchester, Massachusetts exterior
Share experience

Nearby Places

Museum of Bad Art

The Museum of Bad Art (MOBA) is a privately owned museum whose stated aim is "to celebrate the labor of artists whose work would be displayed and appreciated in no other forum". It was originally in Dedham, Massachusetts and is currently in Boston, Massachusetts. Its permanent collection includes over 700 pieces of "art too bad to be ignored", 25 to 35 of which are on public display at any one time.MOBA was founded in 1994, after antique dealer Scott Wilson showed a painting he had recovered from the trash to some friends, who suggested starting a collection. Within a year, receptions held in Wilson's friends' home were so well-attended that the collection needed its own viewing space. The museum then moved to the basement of a theater in Dedham. Explaining the reasoning behind the museum's establishment, co-founder Jerry Reilly said in 1995: "While every city in the world has at least one museum dedicated to the best of art, MOBA is the only museum dedicated to collecting and exhibiting the worst." To be included in MOBA's collection, works must be original and have serious intent, but they must also have significant flaws without being boring; curators are not interested in displaying deliberate kitsch. MOBA has been mentioned in dozens of off-the-beaten-path guides to Boston, featured in international newspapers and magazines, and has inspired several other collections throughout the world that set out to rival its own visual atrocities. Deborah Solomon of The New York Times Magazine noted that the attention the Museum of Bad Art receives is part of a wider trend of museums displaying "the best bad art". The museum has been criticized for being anti-art, but the founders deny this, responding that its collection is a tribute to the sincerity of the artists who persevered with their art despite something going horribly wrong in the process. According to co-founder Marie Jackson, "We are here to celebrate an artist's right to fail, gloriously."