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    Free Art Friday

    Free Art Friday brings Houston artists and strangers together in fun-filled scavenger hunt

    Elizabeth Rhodes
    Apr 16, 2015 | 4:30 pm

    Fridays in Houston just became a lot more fun thanks to some motivated local artists and their desire to share artworks with the community.

    Artists Black Cassidy and Scott Tarbox have pioneered Houston's own Free Art Friday, an art scavenger hunt open to everyone. Since the phrase was coined more than 10 years ago by British artist My Dog Sighs, events have been popping up in cities around the world, and now Houston is one of them.

    Not only must hunters find the work, but they have to grab it before anyone else does.

    Artists participating in Free Art Friday post photos of their freshly hidden artworks on Instagram using the hashtag #htxfreeartfriday. Art hunters must use visual or textual clues from the posts — perhaps a street sign or comment about a local landmark — to locate the work.

    Not only must hunters find the work, but they have to grab it before anyone else does.

    Cassidy says he first heard about Free Art Friday through an artist from Austin, where the weekly event had already been established for more than a year.

    "I'd never heard of it," Cassidy says. "When he explained it, immediately I thought, 'That's genius.' I was instantly on a mission to get people involved. I didn't really know how to explain it to folks because you've got to ask people to give away art for free."

    Weekly occurence

    After about six months of planning, Cassidy launched the event last August with a few artists who felt passionately about the success of Free Art Friday as a weekly occurrence. Only a few weeks later, Tarbox contacted Cassidy and said he wanted to help.

    "From then on every decision was made by both of us, then (graffiti organization) Aerosol Warfare, (Austin graffiti collective) SprATX and (artist) Steven Horowitz teamed up with us within the next month or two," Cassidy says.

    "People are becoming art collectors and they don't even know it," says participating artist Dom Bam.

    Now, just a little over eight months after the first Free Art Friday, Cassidy and Tarbox estimate that at least 25 artists participate each week, with more artists joining as the event continues to grow. According to several participating artists, most of them discovered the event by seeing posts on friends' social media accounts.

    "I was lucky enough to be on Instagram the first week of Free Art Friday started and I thought, 'This looks like so much fun,'" says participating artist Laurie Mills. "I put out two pieces the first day and the first piece was gone within about 30 minutes. It's fun to see how quickly they go."

    "It's pretty organic," says participating artist Dandee Warhol. "I've seen friends on social media who aren't from Houston start to do it in different cities now. Hopefully it'll transition worldwide and Friday will just be 'free art day.'"

    Unique pieces for free

    In addition to the appeal of a grown-up scavenger hunt, most hunters are especially excited by the opportunity to own local artists' unique pieces for free.

    "It's fun because a lot of people can't afford to buy art," Warhol says. "We have people that like our work and we might as well give them what we can to support the community."

    "People are becoming art collectors and they don't even know it," says participating artist Dom Bam.

    While many artists choose place their works in and around the Montrose area, more artists are choosing to drop pieces outside of the Loop, some even going as far as Sugar Land.

    Be sure to follow @htxgroundcontrol and check the hashtag #htxfreeartfriday on Instagram to keep up on the events every Friday and claim your own free art pieces — if you can find them first!

    Mixed media artist Laurie Mills posted this image of her work, ready to be found in the Montrose area.

    Laurie Mills Free Art Friday instagram
    this_apron_is_for_painting Instagram
    Mixed media artist Laurie Mills posted this image of her work, ready to be found in the Montrose area.
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    Thanks, Tommy

    Houston-born Broadway legend  donates 50,000 item personal collection to UH

    Holly Beretto
    Jan 9, 2026 | 1:45 pm
    Tommy Tune headshot
    Courtesy of University of Houston
    Tommy Tune has received 10 Tony Awards.

    Broadway legend Tommy Tune and his sister Gracey have made a major gift to the University of Houston, ensuring that the star's larger-than-life legacy will be available for scholars and students for generations to come. The Tony Award-winning actor, choreographer, and director has given a collection of costumes, scripts, design sketches, choreography notes, photos and personal letters to the university.

    More than 50,000 items in all, the collection captures the creative spirit of Broadway in the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s and provides a window into how iconic productions were conceived, staged, and experienced. Tune, a native Houstonian who earned his master's degree in directing from UH in 1964, has been one of Broadway's luminaries for decades, helming the original production of The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas, Nine, and more. He is the first person to win Tony Awards in four different categories, and the only person in Tony Awards history to win the same categories in consecutive years, taking home best choreography and best directing in 1990 and 1991. He is also the recipient of a Lifetime Achievement Tony Award.

    He starred opposite Barbra Streisand in the 1969 film Hello, Dolly!

    “The University of Houston felt like the natural home for it because it’s where my story truly began,” Tune said. “This collection represents my life in musical theater, and I want it to inspire the next generation of artists in the city that first inspired me.”

    The collection is housed in the UH Archives in the MD Anderson Library. Tune's sister Gracey noted that her brother's extraordinary career is part of theater history.

    “You don’t win nine Tony Awards in so many facets of the craft — and a 10th for Lifetime Achievement — without shaping the era itself,” she said. “This collection covers every corner of his Broadway life, and many of his creations still live on stages around the world.”

    The gift means that current and future generations of students and researchers will have access to remarkable items and letters.

    “This collection is a significant contribution to the study of theater history, particularly musical theater,” said University of Houston Archivist Mary Manning. “It will be invaluable to students, performers, filmmakers and researchers who want to explore Tune’s creative process, reconstruct productions or gain cultural context for the works he directed and performed in.”

    Tune's connections to Houston run deep. TUTS' annual Tommy Tune Awards are named for the star, and recognize excellence in high school musical theater.

    Tune expressed gratitude for the university and acknowledged that donating these pieces of his life and work represent a full-circle moment.

    “The University of Houston has an energy and creative spirit that matches everything this collection represents,” Tune said. “If my life’s journey can help even one young artist see a bigger future for themselves, it will be the perfect encore.”

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