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    best march art

    9 vivid and eye-catching March art events no Houstonian should miss

    Tarra Gaines
    Mar 9, 2022 | 11:31 am
    The Menil introduces Houston to "Meret Oppenheim: My Exhibition" before New York gets the show.
    The Menil introduces Houston to "Meret Oppenheim: My Exhibition" before New York gets the show.
    Image courtesy of Elizabeth Rodriguez

    March in Houston brings art offerings for every taste. The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston rolls out three major spring exhibitions, two that will make us question art reality. The Menil introduces us to a surrealist giant, and the CAMH shows some Rockets pride.

    Plus, spring means it time for art in the park for Bayou City Art Festival at Memorial Park. Here are your best bets.

    “Dawoud Bey: An American Project” at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (now through May 30)
    The preeminent photographer has spent his career chronicling underrepresented communities and seldom depicted histories. This major retrospective featuring 85 works from the 1970s to the present is organized around Bey’s evolving vision and focus throughout his career.

    The galleries are arranged around three main themes and major series including his photo chronicles of street scenes, portraits taken in his studio and his more recent projects exploring African-American history.

    “The exhibition and its evocative title introduce Bey’s deeply humanistic photographs into a long-running conversation about what it means to represent America with a camera,” says MFAH director Gary Tinterow in a statement about the cultural power of the exhibition, which is being co-organized by the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art.

    “Notorious RBG: The Life and Times of Ruth Bader Ginsburg” at Holocaust Museum Houston (March 11-July 31)
    Not quite a visual art exhibition, but we must highlight this different kind of retrospective, and examination of the life and influence of Supreme Court justice, cultural and legal icon Ruth Bader Ginsburg. (Read a full story here.)

    The exhibition creates 3D environments bringing to life important moments in Justice Ginsburg’s life, including her childhood home in Brooklyn and the Supreme Court bench. Look also for multiple listening stations where visitors can hear RBG’s delivery of oral arguments, her robe and jabot, the desk in her chambers and official portraits of RBG and Sandra Day O’Connor, the first two women to serve on the Supreme Court, on loan from the National Portrait Gallery.

    “Blue Norther” at Site Gallery (March 12 and every Saturday in March)
    Housed in the old silo grain storage building at Sawyer Yards Site Gallery’s circular honeycomb-like spaces, this space would definitely place in a contest for strangest and wondrous art space in the city. (We’d say it’s still in a runoff with the Buffalo Bayou Cistern.)

    We certainly can’t pass up this invitational multimedia show consisting of living artists from Texas and Louisiana, as the jurors gave the 25 participating artists “little lead time to prepare.” Catch the show on Saturdays to see what forms art created in haste and named after a wind driven Texas cold front can take.

    “Virtual Realities: The Art of M.C. Escher from the Michael S. Sachs Collection” at MFAH (March 13-September 5)
    With art that bends time, space and minds, this world premiere Escher exhibition might just become the art blockbuster of the season.

    Organized by the MFAH from from the collection of Michael S. Sachs, “Virtual Realities” will be the largest and most comprehensive exhibition of works by M.C. Escher ever held, and will include more than 400 prints, drawings, watercolors, printed fabrics, constructed objects, wood and linoleum blocks, lithographic stones, sketchbooks, and the artist’s working tools.

    Escher fans and novices will get an unparalleled look into the physics-defying visions of the pioneering Dutch artist.

    “Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary Realities” at MFAH (March 15- June 5)
    Acclaimed for her art merging South and Central Asia manuscript painting traditions with contemporary art processes and practice, Sikander is one of the most signifiant artists working today. The exhibition will feature over 60 paintings, drawings and video animations, including pieces she created while in Houston as part of the MFAH Glassell School of Art Core Program.

    “Her vibrant synthesis of illustrated manuscript painting with contemporary art practice has played a critical role in recognizing a wider range of perspectives, including those of women, people of color, Muslims, and artists working outside the US and Europe,” notes Gary Tinterow, explaining why the MFAH is so pleased to once again present Sikander’s art to Houston.

    “Sawed, Soldered, Constructed: The Work of the Houston Metal Arts Guild” at Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (March 19-May 7)
    Craft gets metal-head industrial for this juried exhibition of the Houston-based guild comprised of jewelry and metal artists. The exhibition celebrates the wide range of design, processes, and techniques used in contemporary jewelry and metalwork.

    Featuring works by 36 artists, the show features pure sculptures but functional pieces and wearable pieces like boxes, necklaces, and lockets.

    “Houston Rockets x CAMH” at Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (March 23-April 17)
    Here’s one for the sports art lovers. This year is the 75th anniversary of the NBA and the CAMH decided to set up an art slam dunk by partnering with the Houston Rockets to commission 11 limited-edition posters for the team’s Remix Night games during their 2021–2022 season.

    Each game honored a different Rockets legend and local basketball-loving artists — Rabéa Ballin, Tay Butler, Gregory Michael Carter, Ann Johnson, Matt Manalo, Jack Massing, Robert Pruitt, Alexis Pye, Phillip Pyle, II, Sarah Welch, Stephen Wilson — were invited to create a celebratory artwork for each night.

    Now, Rockets and art fans can see all 11 posters together at the CAMH, signed by both Rockets legends and the artists.

    Bayou City Art Festival at Memorial Park (March 25-27)
    Though it doesn’t look a day over 25, one of Houston’s favorite art festivals, Bayou City Art Festival, celebrates its 50th anniversary this spring as it once again showcases art in Memorial Park.

    Featuring 300 artists from around the country representing 19 different disciplines, the festival will also benefit six local nonprofit partners: ArtReach, A Cause to Give Us Paws, Fresh Arts, Orange Show For Visionary Art, The Museum of Fine Arts and The Women’s Fund for Health Education and Resiliency.

    Head to the park for original artwork, including paintings, prints, jewelry, sculptures, and functional art. Since this is a true festival, stay for the day and take in two entertainments stages, an active imagination zone for kids, a craft beer and wine garden for adults, and the food truck park for everyone.

    “Meret Oppenheim: My Exhibition” at Menil Collection (March 25-September 18)
    Though less known in the United States, the Swiss artist Meret Oppenheim took a central place in the Surrealist movement internationally throughout her 50-year career. This new retrospective, having its U.S debut at the Menil before traveling to the Museum of Modern Art, New York, will offer an overview of the breadth of her creations from paintings, jewelry, sculpture, and even poetry.

    The exhibition will also trace her diverse themes from the natural world to mythology, gender, and selfhood. Organized chronologically, “My Exhibition” will highlight major chapters in her creative evolution from her artistic formative years in 1930s Paris to her reengagement with Surrealist ideas and her later work alongside the Nouveau Réalisme and Pop movements.

    “As a museum with a strong collection of Surrealist art, the Menil is proud to host the American debut of this important retrospective of Oppenheim’s wide-ranging and expansive career,” says Menil director Rebecca Rabinow.

    "Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary Realities" opens March 15 at the MFAH.

    "Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary Realities" opening day
      
    Photo courtesy of The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
    "Shahzia Sikander: Extraordinary Realities" opens March 15 at the MFAH.
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    this ballerina knows business

    Houston Ballet names new executive director with deep ties to its past

    Tarra Gaines
    May 5, 2025 | 10:00 am
    Sonja Kostich Houston Ballet
    Photo by Bre Johnson
    Houston Ballet appoints Sonja Kostich as the organization’s next Executive Director.

    Dance lovers who saw Houston Ballet artistic director Stanton Welch’s beautiful and fierce Maninyas back in February probably didn’t realize they were witnessing a dance with significant hidden history. Maninyas was the Australian-born Welch’s first American commissioned work when it had its 1996 world premiere in San Francisco. Seeing that premiere inspired Ben Stevenson, Houston Ballet's artistic director at the time, to invite Welch to create a piece for the company, eventually paving the way for Welch to serve as the company's artistic director.

    Sonja Kostich Houston Ballet
      

    Photo by Bre Johnson

    Houston Ballet appoints Sonja Kostich as the organization’s next Executive Director.

    It seems those dance waves from Maninyas continue to reverberate, for on stage for that 1996 world premiere performance was acclaimed ballerina Sonja Kostich. And today Houston Ballet announced Kostich will leap into the role of Houston Ballet executive director beginning in August.

    Kostich assumes the directorship after major triumphs in roles onstage, backstage, and behind executive desks across the dance world. As a young dancer, Kostich trained at the prestigious School of Classical Ballet, a program created by Mikhail Baryshnikov. Then at 17 she was chosen by Baryshnikov himself to join the American Ballet Theatre. Such began a impressive career dancing with the San Francisco Ballet, Zurich Ballet, Baryshnikov’s White Oak Dance Project, and collaborations with renowned director Peter Sellars. One of Kostich’s big endeavor mixing dance and entrepreneurship came in 2008, when she co-founded the contemporary dance company OtherShore in New York. She also served as co-director for six years.

    After hanging up her ballet slippers, at least professionally, Kostich pursued a career in business, earning a Bachelor of Business Administration in Accounting from the Zicklin School of Business at CUNY Baruch College, where she graduated Salutatorian at age 42. She also completed a master's degree in arts administration.

    Kostich's professional experience includes roles at Goldman Sachs, Mark Morris Dance Group, and New York City Center. From 2018 to 2022, she was Chief Executive and Artistic Officer of Kaatsbaan Cultural Park, leading a successful rebranding and revitalization of the organization.

    Since 2022, Kostich has served as president and executive director of Baryshnikov Arts Center in New York City. Her work at the Center likely caught the HB board’s eye, as her tenure helped to achieve financial stability, expand opportunities for artists, and increase both earned and contributed income to record-breaking levels while engaging new, diverse audiences.

    “We are thrilled to welcome Sonja Kostich to Houston Ballet,” said Kristy Bradshaw, Houston Ballet board chair, in a statement. “Our board has worked diligently to ensure the continued financial strength and operational excellence of our company, building on the legacy of our retiring executive director, Jim Nelson. It is through this solid foundation — marked by fiscal stewardship, exceptional senior leadership, and a highly capable organizational structure that we have been able to attract such remarkable talent in Kostich. We are confident that her vision, creativity, and leadership will further elevate our company on the global stage. We look forward to this exciting new chapter for Houston Ballet.”

    Kostich has as many good things to say about the company as the board does about welcoming her.

    “Houston Ballet is an exemplary company with exceptional artists, dedicated employees, and a robust history of supporters and audience goers,” said Kostich. “I am deeply humbled and honored to build upon the company's remarkable legacy and look forward to developing thoughtful and valuable long-term relationships within the community. Ballet as an art form has a phenomenal capacity to generate real inspiration and engagement in all ages."

    Along with collaborating with Welch in the past, Kostich also has ties to the company’s co-artistic director, Julie Kent. Kent and Kostich overlapped during their dance careers at the American Ballet Theatre.

    Both Welch and Kent also sing Kostich’s praises.

    “I am thrilled that Sonja will be joining Houston Ballet as executive director. She will be an excellent partner to bring Houston Ballet into our next chapter,” said Welch. “Along with her exceptional leadership capabilities, Sonja will also bring a level of unique dance expertise that will enhance our Company.”

    Julie Kent added, “I very much look forward to what will be a highly collaborative experience that will only elevate what Houston Ballet can achieve, both artistically and as an organization. Sonja’s extraordinary talents and drive are a perfect match for our future goals.”

    The feelings are mutuals from Kostich who ended her statement saying, “I am thrilled by this opportunity to work with Stanton and Julie, truly accomplished and respected artistic leaders, as we work together on a firm vision for the limitless potential for the future of Houston Ballet.”

    James Nelson, the retiring executive director, will assume the title of executive advisor, supporting Kostich during her transition.

    houston balletsonja kostich
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