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Museum of American Bird Art at Mass Audubon is an art museum planned to be built at Mass Audubon's Brewster's Woods Wildlife Sanctuary in Concord, Massachusetts.

History
The first site of the museum was at the Mildred Morse Allen Wildlife Sanctuary in Canton. Allen, an artist, filmmaker, conservationist, and philanthropist, was the granddaughter of Elijah A. Morse. Upon her death in 1989, Allen bequeathed her house, art studio, and 121 acres of land to Mass Audubon. Allen's house was used as the sanctuary headquarters. The museum opened in Allen's art studio in 1999, under the name, "Mass Audubon Visual Arts Center". The museum was given its current name in 2013. The museum's first director was Amy Montague.

In 2019, Concord resident Nancy Beeuwkes donated 143 acres of land, and several buildings, to Mass Audubon. The land became the Brewster's Woods Wildlife Sanctuary.

In the late 19th century, the land, known as October Farm, was owned by ornithologist William Brewster, who was the first president of Mass Audubon. An 80-acre portion of October Farm, adjacent to the sanctuary and known as the October Farm Riverfront, is owned by the Concord Land Conservation Trust and the Town of Concord.

Dr. Jennifer Tafe was appointed Director of the museum in 2024.

Proposed New Museum
Mass Audubon originally planned to renovate the 1985 residence on October Farm to serve as the new museum, using a design by Oudens Ello Architecture. Reed Hilderbrand was to carry out the landscape architecture work. .

In 2024, Mass Audubon announced a plan to build a new museum building on the property. Groundbreaking is expected in 2026.

Exhibitions
Exhibitions at the museum's first location in Milton featured Andy Warhol and John James Audubon, David Allen Sibley , Tony King , Arthur B. Singer , and artist-in-residence Barry Van Dusen

In 2022, MABA collaborated with the Concord Museum on an exhibit entitled Alive with Birds: William Brewster in Concord that was on display at the Concord Museum.