David Ortiz’s Monster Performance Reassures That Brief Slump Was Minor Hiccup in Long Season
Jaromir Jagr Has Been ‘Good Addition’ to Bruins Despite Lack of Postseason Scoring (Video)
Andy Pettitte’s Injury Will Truly Test Yankees’ Magic, As New York Can’t Afford to Lose Starting Pitching
Ryan Dempster Plagued by Inconsistency in Red Sox Win Over Twins (Video)
Red Sox-Twins Live: David Ortiz’s Two Home Runs, Six RBIs Propel Sox Past Twins 12-5
Red Sox’ Successful Road Trip Record Due, in Part, to Strong Bullpen (Video)
Yu Darvish’s High Pitch Count Against Tigers No Reason to Hold Ron Washington’s Feet to Fire
It’s not too often that baseball and fine art go hand-in-hand, but at the Grandstand to Gallery Exhibition at Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts, that’s exactly the case.
Celebrating 100 years of Fenway Park history, this year the two organizations decided to honor the ballpark by featuring a gallery of Fenway art submitted by fans. Ultimately, six photographs were chosen from 700 submissions broken up into three categories — portraits, landscapes and curveballs. Three were chosen by the director of the MFA, and three were voted on by the fans.
Fenway and the MFA have shared the same neighborhood for those 100 years, so if you, too, are a connoisseur of fine art, you can check out Jenny Dell‘s experience at the gallery in the video above.