Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Environmental Leader and Innovator | Page 17

People and Happenings Roberto Mighty and IMLS In August 2013, the Frie nds was awarde d a $92,000 grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services (IMLS) for a two-year project to catalog, photo- graph, and assess the Cemetery’s Significant Monuments Collection and fine arts statuary in order to create a baseline for preservation. The project also includes research and digitization of related archival collections. The final outcome will include a workshop for peers, an online exhibition, and a short film documenting conservation of one of Mount Auburn’s most significant and threatened memorials: the Amos Binney Monument sculpted by noted American artist Thomas Crawford in 1847. As part of the project, Mount Auburn has engaged new media artist, filmmaker, photographer, and sound designer Roberto Mighty as our first artist-in-residence. Roberto is Adjunct Professor at Emerson College’s Department of Visual and Media Arts and also an Instructor in the Jour- nalism Department at Boston University’s College of Communication. He was Artist-in-Residence at Harvard Forest 2011-12, where he created an immersive multimedia exhibit for Harvard’s Fisher Museum entitled “First Con- tact: Puritans, Native Americans and the Clash Over Land in 1630.” In 2013, his exhibits, installations, projects and film screenings included “Cloud Lightning” at the National Science Foundation in Reston, VA; “Descent” at the Lesley University Brattle Gallery in Cambridge, MA; and “Trees of My City” at the Scandinavian Cultural Center in Newton, MA. All of Roberto’s work reflects themes of nature, history, science, spirituality and relationships, making him the perfect choice to document the conservation of the Binney monu- ment, and to create a short film about the project and the monument’s history. As you explore the grounds this summer, perhaps you will encounter Roberto while he works on this exciting project. You can also track his residency at Mount Auburn by reading the “Artitst In Residence Blog” he’ll be keeping for the duration of this project: www.mountauburn.org/ ArtistInResidence-RobertoMighty. Three generations of Kittie Knox’s relatives, the Towle- Millett family, attended the dedication of the monument to 19th-century cyclist Kittie T. Knox. Cambridge Vice Mayor E. Denise Simmons presided over the event held on Sunday, September 29, 2013. Kittie Knox is one of fifteen individuals profiled in Mount Auburn’s new African American Heritage Trail. On September 26, 2013, members of Mount Auburn’s Council of Visitors attended the second annual full-day meeting at the Cem- etery. Highlights included a luncheon, break-out sessions, and walk- ing tours about the many facets of Mount Auburn. A keynote lecture exam ining Mount Auburn from the Perspective of Environmental History was delivered by Dr. Aaron Sachs, Associate Professor of History and American Studies at Cornell University. Summer 2014 | 15