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    Monsters Mash

    Shadow Monsters invade museum: Create a creature with 21st-century technology for ferocious fun

    Tarra Gaines
    May 28, 2015 | 3:01 pm

    Don’t be afraid, Houston, but the Museum of Fine Arts has unleashed a hall (Cullinan Hall to be precise) full of monsters, and they’re waiting to play with you in the light. With the opening of artist Philip Worthington’s Shadow Monsters installation, a summer a trip to the MFAH becomes something like a journey inside a storybook full of ferocious, but lovable monsters, and visitors will become co-creators in their own tale.

    After the success of last year’s installation Soto: The Houston Penetrable, it’s not surprising that the MFAH would bring another interactive art work for some cool art fun to our long, hot summer days. This time instead of wading into Penetrable’s transparent and golden stranded sea, adults and kids alike can become magicians of light.

    When I got a preview of the work and a chance to talk with Worthington, the word magic did seem to pop up –– like a shadow rabbit from a silhouette hat –– more than a few times.

    Playing with light and shadow

    Shadow Monsters takes the ancient concept of shadow play, using light and solid props to project shapes on a wall, to its 21-century technological extreme. Entering Cullinan Hall, visitors can step in front of one of the three light boxes and make shapes with their bodies. The vision-recognition computer software analyzes the silhouettes, looking at angles and contours, and then adds animation and sounds to the projection of the shadow onto the wall.

    Make a shadow mouth with your hands and the computer adds eyes, teeth, bubbles and perhaps the snarl of a crocodile to your projection.

    Make a shadow mouth with your hands and the computer adds eyes, teeth, bubbles and perhaps the snarl of a crocodile to your projection.

    Worthington’s idea for this monster first sprang to life as a project for a school assignment. Working on his masters in Interaction Design from the Royal College of Art, he was required to devise a “technological magic trick.”

    “At the time I was interested in computer vision,” he explained. “I started looking at Victorian shadow play and people who make these incredible forms using body parts. Just combining those two ideas, it just sort of evolved from there.”

    But why monsters, instead of something like happy little shadow bunnies?

    “Monsters are just fun,” Worthington insisted. “I think everyone can interact with them. I wanted it to be fun and accessible for everyone.”

    For kids of all ages

    After I got to try my own hand (pun intended) at making monsters, I couldn’t decide what was most enjoyable about the experience, creating my own shadow beasts, or watching others contort their bodies and then seeing how those contortions translate into their own, not so private, monsters. Either way, the installation does generate much joy.

    “Monsters are just fun,” Worthington insisted. “I think everyone can interact with them. I wanted it to be fun and accessible for everyone.”

    Since Shadow Monsters has been traveling internationally for several years now, Worthington has become something of an expert at how easily people lose their museum manners when they get to play in the installation. So I had to ask: Who creates the best critters, kids or adults?

    “Watching kids is great because they actually get it,” he said, “but watching a 50-year-old guy in a suit or my granddad come along and suddenly turn into a four-year-old, I think that’s the most interesting. It somehow brings out something childish inside of you.”

    Shadow Monsters remains at the MFAH until Sept. 20, with some possible changes and special programs coming to enhance the experience. There's already a live feed to watch the monsters from a safe distance. A props box might be added, and Worthington continues to think of schemes to multiply the monsters. He isn’t promising anything but is toying with the idea that there might be some way for museum goers to print or email their monsters home to them. Who knows, perhaps one day we can give them a place beneath our beds to guard us a night.

    Until then, this interactive art reminds us that fantastical creatures don’t just live in our imaginations, they’re always with us when light creates shadow.

    Philip Worthington's, Shadow Monsters, images created by Java, Processing, BlobDetection, SoNIA, and Physics software.

    Museum of Fine Arts Shadow Monsters
    Courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
    Philip Worthington's, Shadow Monsters, images created by Java, Processing, BlobDetection, SoNIA, and Physics software.
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    miller outdoor theatre improved

    Hermann Park's always-free theater breaks ground on new Gateway Plaza

    Eric Sandler
    Nov 17, 2025 | 1:00 pm
    Miller Outdoor Theatre Gateway Plaza rendering
    Courtesy of DLR Group with landscape design by Michael Van Valkenburg Associates (MVVA)
    Theatre visitors will see this new sign at the plaza's entrance.

    One of Houston’s most enduring, family-friendly attractions is getting some upgrades. When audiences return to Miller Outdoor Theatre next summer, they’ll be welcomed by a new plaza and other improvements.

    The Miller Theatre Advisory Board (MTAB) officially broke ground on the new Gateway Plaza last week. It marked the occasion with a ceremony attended by Houston Mayor John Whitmire, park board representatives, and other officials.

    Designed to improve accessibility and the overall visitor experience, the Gateway Plaza will feature new walkways that will both connected the theater to the rest of Hermann Park and improve drainage at the site. Three new shade structures will replicate the theater’s distinctive, A-frame design. In addition, the “Dining Bosque,” a popular area for pre-show meals, will have its picnic tables refreshed, among other improvements.

    “We’re thrilled to have broken ground on the Gateway Plaza Project,” MTAB managing director Claudia de Vasco said in a statement. “It’s a fitting start to Miller’s next century — an investment in spaces that reflect who we are as both an iconic arts venue and a welcoming public gathering place, inviting everyone to experience the performances and memories that make Miller so special.”

    Located on 7.5 acres within Hermann Park, Miller Outdoor Theatre provides eight months per year of free programming in genres such as classical music, jazz, Shakespeare, classic movies, and more — all funded by the City of Houston through the Houston Arts Alliance. It has seating for approximately 1,700 people as well as a spacious lawn that can hold another 4,500. Currently, the facility is closed for construction but is scheduled to reopen in the summer of 2026.

    “Miller Outdoor Theatre is a special gathering place for the people of Houston,” added Mayor Whitmire. “I am excited about the Gateway Plaza Project because these improvements will ensure that Miller Outdoor Theatre continues to serve the community for generations to come.”

    Miller Outdoor Theatre Gateway Plaza rendering

    Courtesy of DLR Group with landscape design by Michael Van Valkenburg Associates (MVVA)

    Theatre visitors will see this new sign at the plaza's entrance.

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