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    Are you sane enough?

    Inside the mind of an obsessed lover: Da Camera's multimedia world premiere is an art orgasm

    Joel Luks
    May 3, 2013 | 11:16 am
    Inside the mind of an obsessed lover: Da Camera's multimedia world premiere is an art orgasm
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    It wasn't one of the finest moments in my life. But surely it was a defining one — and I'm certain you've gone through it, too.

    An obsession with unrequited love.

    You know what happens. There's a disconnect between fact and fantasy. Your gray matter decides to reinterpret all sorts of messages and symbols to suit its agenda to convince yourself that at the end of this emotionally tumultuous ordeal there's warmth and affection. Suffering is just a part of it. It has to be. That's how we grow, learn and get stronger.

    Swedish mezzo soprano Charlotte Hellekant tells it like it is: "When you are in love, it's a potion, it's a drug. You can't resist."

    But once the truth rears its unsympathetic head, once you awaken from this reverie — when you realize that person is just not into you — making a grand entrance is the horsemen of the apocalypse. How will you ever cope? So they say that time heals matters of the heart, but self inflicted wounds are another story altogether.

    This too familiar saga is the lure of a new multimedia spectacle imagined by Sarah Rothenberg, artistic director of Da Camera of Houston. Her production, titled In the Garden of Dreams, is scheduled to premiere Friday and Saturday at the Wortham Theater Center as the finale to Da Camera's 25th anniversary season. The show is presented in collaboration with Houston Grand Opera's staging of Wagner's Tristan and Isolde.

    "When you are in love, it's a potion, it's a drug. You can't resist."

    Consider In the Garden of Dreams a contemporary gesamtkunstwerk, a Wagnerian term that describes the synthesis of artistic languages that by design raptures listeners into an aesthetic milieu of augmented emotions. This approach isn't far from Rothenberg's customary concert curation strategy. Her holy grail is to open meaningful windows into the musical patois, something she achieves by weaving a programmatic thread from piece to piece — much like museum curators append their own visual exegesis in arranging paintings and artifacts in a gallery setting.

    In the Garden of Dream is her fourth venture into this realm, and the third that's mused by consequential oeuvres of Arnold Schoenberg. The Blue Rider, Chopin in Paris: Epigraph for a Condemned Book and Moondrunk all unite elements of visual arts, literature, theater, music and science while pondering the points of intersection of these fields of study. The Blue Rider's 2009 New York premiere was hailed as "Fascinating....incandescent" (New York Times) and "a spellbinding program of music [and] projected images" (Wall Street Journal).

    With set and lighting by Marcus Doshi and projections by Sven Ortel, In the Garden of Dreams kindles the creative zeitgeist of fin de siècle Vienna.

    Let's set the scene.

    In the early 1890s, Brahms was composing his last works — including the Seven Fantasias for piano, Op. 116 and Four Pieces for piano, Op. 119 — in a traditionalist mode that rejected the New German School as embodied by Richard Wagner. German symbolist artist Max Klinger's fondness for music — particularly of Beethoven, Schumann and Brahms — triggered a collection of 18 intaglio prints and 23 lithographs that amplified the essence of the score and text of Brahm's songs. Klinger's Brahms-Phantasie echoes Brahms' personal interest in poetry such that when Klinger sent his creation to Brahms in 1894, Brahms responded with a letter that read, ". . . all art is the same and speaks the same language."

    "You have this whole world in Vienna that we don't always think of as overlapping," Rothenberg explains. "We tend to think of the 20th century as starting. We don't think about the fact that Sigmund Freud could've been sitting at a cafe writing The Interpretation of Dreams (1899) with Brahms around the corner."

    At the same time, Schoenberg penned his first piano pieces. A decade later, Schoenberg finished a 15-part song cycle inspired by the lyrical, imagistic prose of Stefan George. The Book of the Hanging Gardens is a poignant monodrama for voice and piano that marked the beginning of Schoenberg's trials with atonality, though he preferred the term expressionism, whose protagonists experience the extremes of the anticipation, illusion, frustration and cessation of love.

    "The idea behind my productions is that people lose themselves in the piece to such an extent that they can't distinguish between when they are looking and when they are listening."

    This whirlwind of ideas frame Rothenberg's concept. The addition of erotic images of Gustav Klimt and fragments of August Strindberg's A Dream Play offers supplemental context for bass baritone, Michael Sumuel in the Brahms and Hellekant in the Schoenberg to react dramatically to this unconscious, dream-like sequence.

    "He isn't likable, but he's relatable," Sumuel explains about his character. "He goes through such an emotional rollercoaster in a short period of time."

    Sumuel is an HGO Studio alum who appeared recently in the opera company's La bohème and Don Giovanni. Hellekant's demonstrative prowess was in full force in her 2012 debut with the Los Angeles Philharmonic conducted by Gustavo Dudamel. She's earned a reputation for investing "her whole personality in the work, lending her expressive, warm and flexible tone" (Opera Magazine), a skill vital to executing Schoenberg's demanding score.

    Rothenberg's intuition aligns with Schoenberg's philosophies, particularly on his definition of the total work of art. When she came across a quote from Schoenberg that advocated for a new kind of theater, one that would make "music with the media of the stage," she realized that's what she had been doing all along.

    "The idea behind my productions is that people lose themselves in the piece to such an extent that they can't distinguish between when they are looking and when they are listening," she says. "Everything that's there, that's visual and dramatic, is to allow them to experience the music even more viscerally."

    My question to you is: Are you sane enough for a cathartic experience? Heck, call it an art orgasm.

    ___

    Da Camera of Houston presents Sarah Rothenberg's In the Garden of Dreams on Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m., at Wortham Theater Center. Tickets start at $28 and can be purchased online or by calling 713-524-5050.

    In the Garden of Dreams synthesizes artistic languages that by design raptures listeners into an aesthetic milieu of augmented emotions.

    Da Camera Sarah Rothenberg In the Garden of Dreams Charlotte Hellekant
    Photo by Joel Luks
    In the Garden of Dreams synthesizes artistic languages that by design raptures listeners into an aesthetic milieu of augmented emotions.
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    Best May Art

    MFAH's blockbuster modern art exhibit and 7 more openings in Houston this month

    Tarra Gaines
    May 11, 2026 | 12:45 pm
    as Pablo Picasso, Woman in a Multicolored Hat, part of the MFAH's upcoming Picasso–Klee–Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen exhibit, opening May 20
    Image courtesy MFAH
    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents Picasso–Klee–Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen (Pablo Picasso, Woman in a Multicolored Hat, 1939, oil on canvas, Museum Berggruen, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin. © 2026 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York)

    May brings some of the biggest art shows and museum exhibitions of the year to town. Some fly in with patriotic fanfare, while others give us a rare opportunity to gaze at European masterworks. Whether someone is looking for irreverent performance art at the CAMH, wants to get in touch with whimsical spirits at Moody Art Center, buy art for a good cause at Silver Street, or get ready for the World Cup at Sawyer Yards, Houston artists, galleries, and museums have a show for all tastes.

    “Freedom Plane National Tour: Documents That Forged a Nation” at Houston Museum of Natural Science (now through May 25)
    We’ll call this one the art of democracy. This exhibition 250 years in the making might not fit the usual definition of "art," but this touring presentation of Founding-era documents at HMNS has to make this month's must-see list. The National Archives and Records Administration, in partnership with the National Archives Foundation, set aloft this flying tour of some of the nation’s most historical documents, complete with their own plane. Houston is one of only eight U.S. cities where the Freedom Plane will land. The original National Archives records featured in the exhibition are traveling together for the first time. Just some of the historic documents included in the exhibition are an original engraving of the Declaration of Independence; George Washington, Alexander Hamilton, and Aaron Burr’s Oaths of Allegiance, 1778; and the Secret Printing of the Constitution in Draft Form, 1787.

    “As our nation approaches its 250th anniversary, there is no more fitting tribute than bringing these original documents, leaving the National Archives together for the very first time, directly to the American people,” says Joel Bartsch, president and CEO of HMNS. “From George Washington’s oath as a Continental Army officer to the Treaty of Paris that secured our independence, these are not replicas or reproductions. They are the genuine records, and Houston will have the rare privilege of experiencing them in person this May.”

    “20th Annual Empty Bowls” at Silver Street Studios (May 15 and 16)
    For two decades this beloved grassroots fundraising event has given art lovers the chance to pick up one of a kind, handcrafted ceramic bowl-shaped artworks for just $25 dollars each and helped to serve up millions of meals to the hungry. Over the years, Empty Bowls Houston has raised over $1.2 million for the Houston Food Bank. The lunch fundraiser is a collaboration between Houston-area ceramists, woodturners, and artists working in all media and Houston Center for Contemporary Craft. A special ticketed preview party on May 15 will feature light bites, beer and wine, live music, a pottery throw down event with local potters, and a chance to purchase a bowl early before the main event on May 16. Archway Gallery will also host its own annual Empty Bowls exhibition throughout May.

    “No Longer, Not Yet” at Art League (May 15-July 19)
    This exhibition of mixed media and fiber sculptures from Houston-based artist Marisol Valencia is the culmination of Valencia volunteering at a Houston-area shelter serving migrant women and children. To create the works in the show, Valencia uses material imbued with meaning, including fibers sourced from rural Mexican communities where migration often shapes daily life; bedsheets and pillows gathered from the shelter; and porcelain pieces inscribed with collected definitions of “home.” At the center of the exhibition will be a large cascading crochet sculpture made in collaboration with women and volunteers at the shelter.

    “Picasso–Klee–Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen” at Museum of Fine Arts (May 20-September 13)
    Houston claims another first as the MFAH hosts the U.S. debut of this monumental touring exhibition of masterworks by Pablo Picasso, Paul Klee, Henri Matisse, Alberto Giacometti, and other major artists of postwar Europe. The exhibition will also tell the story of influential gallerist Heinz Berggruen and his relationship with the artists and collecting world. From the 1940s into the 1990s, Heinz Berggruen assembled a singular collection of hundreds of modern masterworks, many directly from the artists, and then in 2000, Berggruen placed the collection with the German state. The collection is now housed in the Museum Berggruen in Berlin-Charlottenburg as part of the Berlin State Museums/Foundation of Prussian Cultural Heritage.

    “It is especially rewarding to introduce our audiences to the life and legacy of Heinz Berggruen — a pioneering art dealer, publisher, and collector whom I was privileged to know and work with for more than two decades,” remarks MFAH director Gary Tinterow on bringing the exhibition to Houston.

    “Ballet of the Masses” at Sawyer Yards (May 21-July 25)
    As Houston gets ready for the World Cup, local artists score their own kind of goals with this exhibition of artful soccer balls. Over 40 Houston artists have put a unique spin on a regulation sized fútbol — turning them into sculptural pieces. Organizers will suspend the works from the ceiling of Sabine Street Studios' North Gallery to create a kind of celestial soccer constellation. Together, these works will celebrate the dynamism and joy within sports and art.

    “Never Forgotten” at Sabine Street Studios (May 21-July 25)
    This powerful exhibition comes from a unique collaboration between Texas Center for the Missing, Houston Police Department Forensic Artists, and Sabine Street Studios, all dedicated to bringing the missing home. Three local forensic artists: Thurston Johnson, Bryan Bradley, and Kristen Aloysius have created age-progression portraits of missing persons in the hopes of reuniting families. Beyond showcasing real art, “Never Forgotten” was organized to shine a light on each individual case and continue raising awareness of the missing in our community. Sabine Street Studios will also host special programming in conjunction with the show, including a workshop on forensic drawing and drawing portraits based on memories.

    “Mary Ellen Carroll: How To Talk Dirty and Influence People” at Contemporary Arts Museum (May 22-November 1)
    Acclaimed New York-based conceptual artist Mary Ellen Carroll has spent over four decades crossing disciplines of performance art, photography, architecture, writing, video making, and public art to explore issues of environmentalism, architectural and technological infrastructure, immigration, urban legislation, and identity, as well as tackling fundamental questions of the nature of art. And some of this exploration has taken place in Houston with Carroll’s continual transformation and documentation of a post-war home in the city’s Sharpstown neighborhood.

    This first major museum survey of Carroll’s work takes inspiration from legendary comic Lenny Bruce’s 1965 autobiography of the same name, and emphasizes the irreverent and honest nature of Carroll’s work. The exhibition will bring renewed focus onto some of Carroll’s larger series, for example, “prototype 180,” the Sharpstown project, and “My Death Is Pending… Because,” consisting of separate pieces like video documentation of the artist driving and destroying a 1985 Buick in a demolition derby in 2017 and video of Carroll in a polar bear suit climbing a defunct smokestack in Memphis.

    “Carroll is that unique kind of artist who continually reminds you of the power of art and artists to inspire radical change, in ourselves and the world,” notes senior curator Rebecca Matalon.

    "Shapeshifters, Sprites, and Spirits” at Rice Moody Center for the Arts (May 29 - August 15)
    Delve into a world of whimsical wonder in this new exhibition and the first Texas solo show of acclaimed Japanese artist Masako Miki’s sculptural work and installations. Influenced by diverse artistic movements from European Surrealism to Japanese manga, Miki creates sculptures from felt layered over wood armatures. Once completed, they resemble animated and large scale forms of everyday objects infused with personality and character.

    Miki’s work is also inspired by folkloric traditions, especially Shinto animism and its belief that all beings and things contain a spirit. For the site specific Moody exhibition, Miki has also created works with a focus on yōkai, supernatural entities taking the form of beings, objects, and apparitions, and particularly those that appear in the Night Parade of One Hundred Demons (Hyakki Yagyō), a legend dating to medieval Japan.

    “My characters are ordinary but have extraordinary powers,” describes Miki of her sculptures. “They are secular but are attuned to sacred traditions. As a collective, they advocate for both individual and collective agency, and the importance of stories as unifying systems in today’s complex world.”

    as Pablo Picasso, Woman in a Multicolored Hat, part of the MFAH's upcoming Picasso\u2013Klee\u2013Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen exhibit, opening May 20
    Image courtesy MFAH

    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents Picasso–Klee–Matisse: Masterpieces from the Museum Berggruen (Pablo Picasso, Woman in a Multicolored Hat, 1939, oil on canvas, Museum Berggruen, Neue Nationalgalerie, Berlin. © 2026 Estate of Pablo Picasso / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York)

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