âDonât Look Upâ stars Jennifer Lawrence, Leonardo DiCaprio bid Boston goodbye
The Netflix film is said to wrap filming after three months in Massachusetts
By Kevin Slane Boston.com Staff,Updated February 21, 2021, 2:32 p.m.
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Leonardo DiCaprio and Jennifer Lawrence walked along the platform next to an Acela train at South Station in a scene for Netflix s upcoming film Don t Look Up. John Tlumacki/Globe Staff
Itâs time to say goodbye to Leo, J-Law, Ari, Timmy, Meryl, and the rest of the âDonât Look Upâ cast.
The star-studded Netflix movie, which has been filming in Massachusetts since November, officially wraps principal photography this week, according to three sources familiar with the production.
Happening in and around the white cube this week…
Three years ago the white cube began as a list of art happenings in and around Montreal. Last year, the column took a turn into my own art thoughts and experiences. When the pandemic hit, and Lorenza Mezzapelle took over as arts editor, the column ceased. But now that exhibitions are back, so is the
white cube. Here’s to hoping they don’t shut down these cultural institutions any time soon wine glass emoji .
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For years, the head of a queen sat in storage in a building in Berlin. Her face is smooth, but her head is intricately engraved and topped with a crown befitting a
lyoba a matriarch figure from the Kingdom of Benin, in present day Nigeria.
Carved in the early 16
th century, it is one of more than a thousand metal sculptures looted by British soldiers as they plundered Benin City in 1897. In the century since, the so-called Benin Bronzes have been bought and sold by museums and private collectors across Europe and North America, and today they are among the most coveted African artifacts in the world.