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    Spirit of Swayze

    Modern dance troupe plans time of its life in new location, where nobody puts Baby in the corner

    Joel Luks
    Jan 3, 2014 | 12:28 pm

    Before we fell in love with Johnny Castle in the film Dirty Dancing and Sam Wheat in Ghost, the famed Houstonian who played those roles lived a double life as a football hopeful and an emerging dancer. After practicing the sport at Waltrip High School, Patrick Swayze would walk across the street to take lessons at the Swayze School of Dance and the Houston JazzBallet Company, an academy managed by his mother, Patsy Swayze, located in a commercial strip built in 1970.

    The space at 3480 Ella Blvd., which was vacant and in disrepair for a number of years, will become the new home for Suchu Dance, a modern dance company that has earned its rightful place in Houston's cacophony of entrepreneurial and avant-garde art.

    After searching for four years, it was by serendipity that Suchu artistic director Jennifer Wood found the storied studio in the Garden Oaks/Oak Forest neighborhood, which residents endearingly coined "The Goof." Wood was en route to a friend's home when she saw a vacancy sign on the building, which was most recently some type of tile showroom, and placed a call.

    "It's not easy to find a suitable performing arts and teaching space in Houston," Wood tells CultureMap. "Either the rents are not affordable for a nonprofit operation, or the buildings require too much updating. We were lucky that this landlord helped with the build out."

    "It was a baby that grew into a giant elephant. I never wanted something so grandiose."

    The 1,500 square foot studio, which Wood has leased for three years, will be divided into two areas. The larger, measuring 38-by-30 feet, will accommodate performances and an audience of approximately 50. The smaller, measuring 29-by-17 feet, will be dedicated to classes, workshops and multidisciplinary projects.

    This Suchu Dance studio is more appropriately sized for the company than its previous home at Barnevelder Movement Arts Complex, which it turned over to Dance Source Houston in March. Now called The Barn, the 7,000-square-foot theater in the East End had become a burden for Suchu Dance, inhibiting the troupe's creative output with the financial responsibility of overseeing a facility that was used by a number of small and midsized performing art groups, Wood says.

    "We had been at Barnevelder for 12 years, and we needed a change," she says. "When Barnevelder grew into a space for the arts community, it became too big for us. Often I was put in a difficult position of asking friends and colleagues to meet financial commitments they weren't able to at the time, but I had to, as the main tenant, pay the bills.

    "It was a baby that grew into a giant elephant. I never wanted something so grandiose."

    The move allows for more creative freedom, Wood explains. The cost of creating new work, which includes building sets, decreases in smaller spaces.

    To christen the studio, Suchu Dance will present Nothing, a new evening-length work set for Feb. 6-22. With choreography by Wood, the performance run breaks a six-month hiatus in the company's performance calendar. Although Wood has been busy with residencies at the University of Houston and work in Las Vegas since the summer, this silence marks the first time in 20 years that Suchu has not presented a work in the fall.

    For Nothing, everything has been painted white. Soft sculptures swathed in white fabric will suffuse the stage. The aesthetic represents Suchu Dance starting from a blank slate, a look that mirrors the endless possibilities of Wood's new home, breathing life into an seemingly unremarkable building that holds remarkable history.

    "I hope this isn't the biggest mistake in my life," she jokes. "Change is good, right?"

    Lets hope, as the movie says, Wood has the time of her life.

    Suchu Dance Company's new space under construction in December 2013

    Suchu Dance Company new space under construction December 2013
    Suchu Dance Facebook
    Suchu Dance Company's new space under construction in December 2013
    unspecified
    news/arts

    on the bright side

    'First-of-its kind' Houston park reveals 6 murals by local artists

    Jef Rouner
    Apr 22, 2026 | 10:00 am
    Houston artist Ade Odunfa stands in front of his mural "Salt Marsh" at the Hill at Sims.
    Photo by Scott Julian, courtesy of Houston Parks Board
    "Birth From the Sea" by Ade Odunfa

    One of Houston's most innovative green spaces, the Hill at Sims, is edging toward completion as artists put the finishing touches on a series of six beautiful murals. They should be ready when the park has its grand opening on Saturday, May 23.

    The project is being led by Harris County Precinct One Commissioner Rodney Ellis and the Houston Parks Board. Located in Sunnyside along Sims Bayou, it combines a flooding retention pond with walkways and other infrastructure to create a unique multi-use community space. Adding a series of environmentally-themed murals highlights the project's dedication to empowering nature around Sunnyside.

    “When we bring art, resilience, and opportunity together in one place, we create something that can serve and inspire future generations for decades to come," said Ellis in an emailed statement. "The Hill at Sims is a community-oriented, first-of-its-kind green space in the neighborhood I grew up in. These murals honor Sunnyside, celebrate the natural world, and help turn public space into something people feel proud to protect.”

    The murals include “Impression of Nature” by Emily Ding, “Step Into the Wild” by Carlos Alberto, “Birth from the Sea," a reproduction of a John Biggers’ mural by Ade Odunfa, "The Heron and the Fish” by Ana Marietta, “Rêverie” by Amy Sol inspired by Claude Debussy’s 1890 solo piano piece, and “Salt Marsh”, another Biggers reproduction by Bimbo Adenugba.

    Houston is a major mural and street art city, with an increasing number of spaces using murals to showcase local talent as well as bring a sense of identity to locations like the Hill at Sims. The green space offers both a massive natural setting in a neighborhood that has traditionally been underserved in park acreage with an elevated point to view the whole city, a rare treat in a place as flat as Houston. Thanks to the Bayou Greenways Project, a 150-mile series of trails that connects parks across Houston, people can walk or bike to the Hills at Sims if they choose to.

    "Our goal is for every person who visits this park to feel that Hill at Sims truly represents the Sunnyside community. Public art is a powerful and joyful way to evoke feelings of connection and stewardship in public settings,” said Justin Schultz, President and CEO, Houston Parks Board, in an emailed statement. “Houston Parks Board is proud to support Commissioner Ellis to bring Sunnyside residents a transformative, multi-benefit greenspace that captures the spirit of Houston: turning our climate challenges into vibrant community assets.”

    The total cost of Hill at Sims is $28.3 million. Funding comes from Precinct One ($18.8 million), The Brown Foundation ($7.5 million), with an additional $2 million from public federal and state funds secured by State Representative Alma Allen and Congressman Al Green. When complete, it will feature a 1.6 mile basin loop trail, water access pier, a parking lot, a 2,000-square-foot open air pavilion with restrooms, flexible lawn space for active programming, and picnic pavilions.

    parksvisual-arthills at simsanderson
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