Articles
- PechaKucha Boston 21
- PechaKucha Boston 20
- PechaKucha Boston 19
- PechaKucha Boston 18
- PechaKucha Boston 17
- PechaKucha Boston 16
- PechaKucha Boston 15
- Pecha Kucha Boston 14
- Pecha Kucha Boston 13
- Pecha Kucha Boston 12
- Pecha Kucha Boston 11
- Pecha Kucha Boston 10
- Pecha Kucha Boston 9
- Pecha Kucha Boston 8
- Pecha Kucha Boston 7
- Pecha Kucha Boston in 2009
- Pecha Kucha Boston 6 speakers and DJ
- AIGA Boston and BSA/AIA co-host 6
- Thank you for 5, see you at 6
- Pecha Kucha Boston 5 speakers
- Pecha Kucha Boston 5 at Mantra
- Pecha Kucha Boston 4 speakers
- Pecha Kucha Boston 4 poster
- Pecha Kucha Tokyo 50 and blip.tv video podcast
- Pecha Kucha Boston 4
- Pecha Kucha Boston 3 speakers
- Pecha Kucha Boston 3
- Pecha Kucha Harvard 2 speakers
- Pecha Kucha gets creative
- Gund Hall
- Pecha Kucha gets social
- Preview: Mary Daniels
- Preview: Katy Frankel
- Doors open at 6pm for Beer and Dogs
- Pecha Kucha Harvard 2
- Pecha Kucha Harvard 1
PechaKucha Boston 16
PechaKucha Boston 16
Wed Feb 24
Mantra, 52 Temple Pl, Boston (near Park St T)
Doors open at 6p for drinks and chit chat. Talks start at 7p.
$10 suggested contribution (via Eventbrite). Cash bar.
(You do NOT need to print or bring your Eventbrite ticket. Eventbrite registration is recommended but not required.)
Co-hosted by PechaKucha Boston and RISD Boston.
Open remarks by Brett Stilwell, PechaKucha Boston
Comments by Karen Fox, RISD Boston
20x20 talks
Alyson Fletcher and Evan Dana, Bike and Build
Andrzej Zarzycki and Sapir Ng, SHIFTboston
Anmol Madan, MIT
Jillian Bergman, Remedy Quarterly
Beer break
20x20 talks
Matt Grigsby, Ecolect
Ralph Masiello
Ryan Scott Bardsley
Scott Listfield, Astronaut Dinosaur
Wendy Prellwitz, Prellwitz Chilinski Associates, Inc.
PechaKucha Night was devised in Tokyo in February 2003 as an event for young designers to meet, network, and show their work in public. It has turned into a massive celebration, with events happening in hundreds of cities around the world, inspiring creatives worldwide. Drawing its name from the Japanese term for the sound of "chit chat", it rests on a presentation format that is based on a simple idea: 20 images x 20 seconds. It's a format that makes presentations concise, and keeps things moving at a rapid pace.


