Grundmann Studios in Boston, Massachusetts, was a building on Clarendon Street in the Back Bay. It contained artist's workspaces and multipurpose function rooms Copley Hall and Allston Hall. Prior to 1893, it functioned as a skating rink; after the Boston Art Students' Association leased the building it was renamed in honor of local art educator Emil Otto Grundmann. The Massachusetts Institute of Technology owned the property. Tenants included the Copley Society ; artists Henry R. Blaney, Herman Dudley Murphy, Frank Richmond, Mary Bradish Titcomb; sculptor John A. Wilson, architect Josephine Wright Chapman; and the College Club. The structure existed until 1917, when it was demolished.Events in Copley Hall1890s Artists Festival, 1894 Art exhibition to benefit Boston Art Students' Association American Arts and Crafts Exhibition Daughters of the Revolution of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts exhibit Artists' Festival, 1898 John Singer Sargent exhibit1900s Artists Festival, 1900 Boston Orchestral Club concert Museum of Fine Arts, School of Drawing and Painting, 25th annual exhibit James Abbott McNeill Whistler exhibit Monet exhibition Artists' Festival, 1907 Bela Pratt exhibit
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