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    Great Day for MFAH

    'Now the real fun time starts' after MFAH breaks ground on new building

    Clifford Pugh
    Jun 1, 2017 | 8:00 am

    After years of planning, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston broke ground Wednesday on a stark new 165,000-square-foot building for modern and contemporary art as the centerpiece of its $450 million expansion.

    "Now the real fun time starts," MFAH board chairman Rich Kinder told a crowd of dignitaries under a large tent on the parking lot formerly shared by the museum and the First Presbyterian Church at the corner of Bissonnet and Main streets.

    The building, whose large footprint was outlined in orange plastic safety netting on the paved lot (with "apologies to Christo" MFAH director Gary Tinterow quipped, referring to the artist known for wrapping famous structures), will be named for Kinder and his wife, Nancy. It is scheduled to open in late 2019.

    The Kinders, along with Tinterow, MFAH board vice-chair Anne Duncan, and architects Steven Holl and Chris McVoy, gamely posed for photos while each held a silver shovel over a small plot of dirt that had been carved into the paved lot.

    Tinterow saluted 150 individuals, couples, foundations and corporations who have thus far donated $390 million for the project, which also includes the new Glassell School of Art, currently under construction adjacent to the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building, and the Sarah Campbell Blaffer Conservation Center, a one-story, steel-and-glass structure that will be set atop a museum garage. Rich Kinder specifically thanked 15 donors who have given $3 million or more.

    "We're only $60 million short of our goal, but with your help I know we will achieve it," Tinterow said.

    When completed, the Kinder Building, clad in translucent glass so that it glows when lit from within at night, will house 54,000 square feet of gallery space for exhibitions, a 200-seat theater, a café, a restaurant overlooking the sculpture garden, and an underground parking garage. Pedestrian tunnels will connect the Kinder Building to the existing Caroline Wiess Law Building and the new 80,000-square-foot Glassell School on the 14-acre campus, named for Susan and Fayez S. Sarofim.

    "Now we're really making it an urban campus," said Holl, a renowned architect whose New York-based firm, Steven Holl Architects, designed the Kinder Building as well as the Glassell School, which is scheduled to open in January 2018.

    "It's the first groundbreaking I've ever been to in 40 years of trying to be an architect where the first third of the building is on the second floor," Holl said, looking over at the nearly Glassell School, which currently looks a bit like an unfinished erector set with its unusual ski-slope-like roof that will serve as a big outdoor gathering space when completed.

    Officials set a high mark for the Kinder Building once it is complete. Tinterow predicted it will be an "an instant landmark" while Rich Kinder called the expansion of the museum's campus "transformational." And Holl quoted Winston Churchill, who once said, "First we shape our buildings, and then they shape us."

    A rendering shows a view of the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building from the roof of the nearby Glassell School of Art.

    View of the Nancy and Rich Kinder Museum of Fine Arts Building from Glassell School of ARt
      
    Courtesy of Steven Holl Architects
    A rendering shows a view of the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building from the roof of the nearby Glassell School of Art.
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    international acclaim

    Houston's iconic Rothko Chapel receives new grant to restore Beryl damage

    Jef Rouner
    May 12, 2025 | 10:30 am
    Rothko Chapel exterior
    Courtesy of the Rothko Chapel
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    Houston's beloved Rothko Chapel is one step closer to recovery after Hurricane Beryl in 2024. A substantial new grant from Bank of America will fund the restoration of Mark Rothko pieces damaged by the storm.

    “This grant comes at a pivotal moment – not only for the Rothko Chapel, but in the broader context of our changing climate and growing vulnerability to extreme weather events,” said David Leslie, executive director of the Chapel. “The conservation process will require extensive time, specialized materials, and expert technical support to stabilize and restore these works, ensuring they can once again inspire visitors within this sacred space. Bank of America’s support underscores the urgent need to preserve culturally significant artworks like these, especially as we face new environmental challenges that threaten our artistic legacy.”

    The Bank of America Art Conservation Project has been used to fund the preservation and restoration of culturally significant artworks since 2010. In 2021, the project also funded the restoration of an 13th Century Incan textile housed at Houston's Menil Collection. This year's other recipients include the National Portrait Gallery in Washington, D.C., the Museo Nacional de San Carlos in Mexico City, Sir John Soane's Museum in London, and the Sydney Opera House.

    Since 1971, Rothko Chapel has been one of the best meditative spaces in Houston. Commissioned by John and Dominique de Menil in 1964, Rothko designed the space and painted its famous black panels. Rothko himself did not live to see the completion, dying by suicide in New York in 1970. Now, the chapel stands as a non-denominational spiritual center, hosting concerts, mindfulness clinics, and other events designed to promote mental healing in visitors.

    When Hurricane Beryl hit Houston on July 8, high winds and torrential hammered the chapel's roof. Water leakage damaged the walls and one of Rothko's black triptychs on the east side of the building. It took seven months of work before the chapel was reopened to the public in December, but the damaged art was still housed off site for restoration. Bank of America's grant should hopefully speed up the process of returning the iconic pieces back to public view.

    “It is devastating to see the domino effects of an event like Hurricane Beryl, jeopardizing the storied institutions and culturally significant works that provide so much context into the Houston identity,” said Hong Ogle, President, Bank of America Houston. “I am very proud that Bank of America’s Art Conservation Project allows us to support the arts in a unique and impactful way and preserve the works that mean the most to our community.”

    In addition to the restoration, Rothko Chapel recently broke ground on a $42 million campus expansion. Two new buildings to the north with house administrative services and an archive, and a meditation garden dedicated to Kathleen and Chuck Mullenweg. A new program center will follow after.

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