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    Mueck at the MFAH

    It's okay to stare at this amazing exhibit: Everyday people come to life in extraordinary sculptures

    Tarra Gaines
    Mar 1, 2017 | 9:20 am

    When interacting with a work of art with our eyes, the verb we use to describe that act might give a hint of the viewer/art relationship to come. Do we see, look, admire, contemplate, or just glance? There will likely be no simple glancing as museumgoers walk into the newest exhibition at Museum of Fine Arts, Ron Mueck.

    When viewing Ron Mueck’s naturalistic sculptures, especially for the first time, perhaps the most accurate verb choice is to stare. We can’t help but stare at these stilled, small or monumental visions of ourselves, especially when some of these sculpted ordinary faces stare right back at us, seeming to know too of life’s every joy and burden.

    “Ron Mueck’s work tantalizes us with its life-like realism, its hyper-realism, but at the same time there is something very meaningful and deep about the work,” MFAH director Gary Tinterow said at a recent media preview of the exhibition.

    Life Familiar

    The exhibition offers 13 sculptures, but since Mueck takes approximately a year to complete a work, the galleries contains almost “one-third of the artist’s total oeuvre,” according to the MFAH. And yet, we could probably spend a full afternoon staring at this baker’s dozen of sculpted people (and one dead chicken) as our gaze turns into a kind of visual exploration into the intricacies of their bodies and faces: the creases of wrinkles, the fine hair on an ankle, a line of veins under the skin, even the smear of blood glazing a newborn.

    From exploration, we might turn into Sherlock Holmesian investigators to deduce the stories the figures tell. Beyond the eerie naturalism of the sculptures are the stuff of dreams and mysteries the art calls us to interpret and solve.

    How can we not wonder what these creatures are thinking? And so we perhaps supply our own backstories based on our own lives. We know these sculpted people: the older Untitled (Seated Woman) lost in her own world or past; the Crouching Boy in Mirror contemplating his emerging identity, the old Couple under an Umbrella lazying at the beach. We recognize them or maybe even once were or will be these people.

    Yet, because they are so life-like, but never life-sized, either much smaller or larger than ourselves, they could never be mistaken for celebrity waxworks or Disney animatronics.

    Interestingly, Mueck began his sojourn into sculpture via puppetry and model-making for television and film. He was even a creature workshop artist on the Jim Henson movie Labyrinth and voiced the monster, Ludo. 


    Taken to Scale

    “That shift in scale is at the heart of Mueck’s work,” explained Alison de Lima Greene, Isabel Brown Wilson Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art at the MFAH, and organizing curator of the exhibition.“The dream aspect of the work comes in part from this always much smaller than life or much larger than life. Those disjunctions push the realism into the unreal.”

    Greene also notes that while the works reflect the mundane as well as the profound of everyday, very much contemporary, life, they also reflect back to the history of art. “He will look at something that is very much of our present time, of our shared experiences but often there will be subtle echoes of the history of art or the larger history of our cultures,” she said.

    For example, Green points out that though we’ve probably seen the real-life version of the weary Woman with Shopping on any busy urban street corner, there’s also something of a subtle hint of a thousand years of, and variations on, the image of mother and child or even Madonna and Child within the sculpture, as well.

    Above all, Green advises we view, stare, and visually investigate the works from all angles, for only then do we glimpse the layered ambiguities of the art that we have to interpret for ourselves. This advice should guide the viewer from beginning to end of the exhibition.

    Case in point, from head on, the second sculpture in the first gallery, Young Couple, might evoke an “aww” of young love spotted, but look behind the teens in mid-whisper at the their clutched hands and arms and suddenly we’re reading the art of what may be a whole other story.

    Traveling through the exhibition to the gigantic A Girl and then perhaps back again to the beginning, we likely will continue to stare and contemplate the mysteries of life portrayed from the artist Tinterow believes to be “one of the most remarkable sculptors or our time.”

    Ron Mueck remains on view at the MFAH to May 29, 2017.

    Ron Mueck, Untitled (Seated Woman), 1999, mixed media, Collection of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Museum purchase.

    Ron Mueck: Untitled (Seated Woman)
      
    Photo by Kevin Todora
    Ron Mueck, Untitled (Seated Woman), 1999, mixed media, Collection of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Museum purchase.
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    A Roman Holiday (Season)

    All roads lead to Houston museum's blockbuster exhibit of Imperial Rome

    Tarra Gaines
    Jun 11, 2025 | 3:15 pm
    ​The Museum of Fine Arts Houston presents "Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times"
    Photo courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
    The Museum of Fine Arts Houston presents "Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times" ("Statue of Trajan" Minturno, Italy, 2nd century, marble, National Archaeological Museum, Naples)

    Houston's holiday season will have a distinctly Roman feeling this year, as the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston is bringing the glory of the Gladiator era to Texas. On November 2, 2025 through January 25, 2026 the MFAH presents the monumental new exhibition “Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times.”

    Featuring 160 objects of antiquity, including marble sculptures, frescoes, mosaics, delicate glass vessels, and exquisite bronze artifacts, the exhibition will transport visitors back in time to the Roman Empire during a flowering of art and architecture. The MFAH partnered with the Saint Louis Art Museum to organize the exhibition, which will showcase many pieces that have never been on view in the U.S.

    While Emperor Trajan might not be the most famous — or in some cases, most infamous — of the Roman emperors, he ruled between 98 and 117 C.E. during the empire’s height and was the second of the so-called “Five Good Emperors” of the Nerva-Antonine dynasty. He was also the first emperor born outside of present-day Italy, in what is now Andalusia, Spain. During his reign, he granted citizenship and rights to some peoples from conquered lands. The exhibition will explore how this time period expanded what it meant to be a Roman and how art reflected Rome’s power and promoted the empire’s values and ideals.

    \u200bThe Museum of Fine Arts Houston presents "Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times"
      

    Photo courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    The Museum of Fine Arts Houston presents "Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times" ("Statue of Trajan" Minturno, Italy, 2nd century, marble, National Archaeological Museum, Naples)

    From statues of prominent men and women of the era, including Trajan, to vivid frescoes and furnishing from the villas of Pompeii, the objects in the exhibition will tell fascinating cultural and political stories of life in imperial Rome. To add context to the artworks and objects of antiquity, the MFAH will recreate a section of Trajan’s Column, which was a towering pillar with a spiraling narrative frieze, one of the few monumental sculptures to have survived the fall of Rome.

    “Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times” brings such a wealth of objects to Houston thanks to unprecedented loans from the renowned antiquities collections of Italian museums including Museo Nazionale Romano, the Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli, the Parco Archeologico di Ostia, and the Musei Vaticani. It would would likely take months of travel across Italy to see this much art.

    “This is truly a rare opportunity for U.S. audiences to experience spectacular objects from this glorious era of the Roman Empire,” said Gary Tinterow, director and Margaret Alkek Williams chair of the MFAH, in a statement. “We are enormously grateful to our colleagues in Rome, Naples, and Vatican City for lending these treasures to us and broadening the appreciation of Italy’s cultural heritage.”

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