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    Blue Dog Love

    Why everyone loves the Blue Dog: Magical Louisiana spirit endures in charming exhibition of Rodrigue work

    Marcy de Luna
    Marcy de Luna
    Jul 4, 2015 | 11:30 am

    At Upper Kirby’s West Ave complex, the walls of the George Rodrigue temporary Houston gallery tell a story.

     

    Here, at Rodrigue: Houston, over 75 works of art, from archives and from private collectors, take you through the late artist’s 45-year career. In the 1960s he began painting dark Louisiana landscapes and Cajun genre scenes. But it’s his iconic Blue Dog paintings that people remember most.

     
     

    "You see a Blue Dog and you don’t forget it,"Rodrigue’s son told CultureMap.

     
     

    "You see a Blue Dog and you don’t forget it," Rodrigue’s son, Jacques Rodrigue told CultureMap.

     

    The 34-year-old attorney, who serves both as house counsel for Rodrigue Studio and as executive director of the George Rodrigue Foundation of the Arts, was recently in Houston to tout the exhibit, which runs through July 19. CultureMap sat down with him to chat about his famous father's legacy.

     

     CultureMap: You and your family are based in Louisiana with galleries in New Orleans, Lafayette and Carmel, California. Why did you choose Houston for this exhibit?

     

     Jacques Rodrigue: Houston was a natural choice. We have so many collectors here and Dad loved this city. He started coming here in the '70s. He would drive in with a trunk full of paintings to sale. That’s how he made his living.

     

    And Dad received treatment, here, at Methodist Hospital for lung cancer. After he passed away, the idea (for the exhibit) came into my head. I knew Houston was the right place.

     

     CM: How are you able to perpetuate your dad’s legacy?

     

     JR: We’re putting together other shows and will do exhibits in other cities. I feel it’s important to share dad’s work. You can go to our galleries in Carmel and in New Orleans, but I want to get the work out to the people.

     

    For the Houston exhibit, we published Rodrigue: The Sanders Collection. Houston businessman Don Sanders (founder and chairman of Sanders Morris Harris investment bank) was a good friend of dad and so was Nolan Ryan. Don is the largest collector in the world and the book features his collection of around 100 pieces, with a forward written by Ryan.

     
     

      "At a show at a gallery in Los Angeles, he heard people discussing the 'blue dog.' He’d never heard that term before and didn’t even realize people were talking about his art." 

     
     

    And our foundation, The George Rodrigue Foundation of the Arts, has a lot of programs in Louisiana to keep the arts in schools. Through these exhibits, we can engage with the local communities; we’ve had a few fundraisers in Houston with all the money going back to the Houston area including $1,000 in art supplies to 25 schools. We’ve provided buses and docents for school groups to come see the exhibit. Research shows how important the arts are in the development of our youth, but they’re often times the first thing cut.

     

     CM: The Rodrigue:Houston exhibit is a micro view of the broad evolution of your father’s 45-year career. Can you give us an idea of what we can expect to see?

     

     JR: The first part of the exhibit shows how dad started painting. He’s originally from New Iberia, Louisiana, and he moved to Los Angeles in the 1960s to attend the Art Center College of Design. He went through the pop art explosion while he was in LA and was there when Andy Warhol’s Campbell’s Soup Can came out. It was the principal of pop art that got him to start painting.

     

    When he returned to Louisiana, he saw how much the culture was changing. He wanted to capture it by documenting the Louisiana landscape and its oak trees.

     

    As he evolved, he wanted to paint the people of Louisiana, the Cajuns, and visually interpret their history on canvas. The story of the Cajuns is that they’re originally French and settled in Nova Scotia. In 1755, the British kicked out the Cajuns and many settled in south Louisiana. What you see in dad’s paintings is symbolic of that story.

     

     CM: How did the Blue Dog come about?

     

     JR: In 1984, he was commissioned to do the artwork for a book of 40 Cajun ghost stories. One of those stories was about a loup-garou, a werewolf boogieman. He thought, “How should I paint it?” Then, as he always did, he started the process by using an old photograph. He found a picture of his old dog, Tiffany, and used her as the model.

     
     

      "As he always did, he started the process by using an old photograph. He found a picture of his old dog, Tiffany, and used her as the model." 

     

     

    For about six years he painted these loup-garou paintings, along with Louisiana legends. At a show at a gallery in Los Angeles, he heard people discussing the “blue dog.” He’d never heard that term before and didn’t even realize people were talking about his art.

     

     CM: When did he turn attention to those iconic paintings?

     

     JR: When he returned home, he decided to paint several Blue Dogs in time for the Super Bowl, held in New Orleans that year. He painted them in the Louisiana landscape. We’d just opened our gallery in the French Quarter (where they were displayed) and people went crazy for them. In 1990, he went full on with the Blue Dog series, officially calling it the “Blue Dog.” For two years the paintings were all set in the Louisiana landscape.

     

    What Andy Warhol and other pop artists had done was to take images from popular culture, repeat them over and over again, and throw it back at you as fine art. (Inspired,) he painted his first work of the Blue Dog alone, without an oak tree, in 1991.

     

    In his mind, the Blue Dog was now a strong enough image to break up the canvas. He didn’t need the oak tree anymore. The Blue Dog was now his Campbell's Soup Can.

     

    What dad felt was unique about him is that he created his own popular pop art image that no one had seen before. The challenge was to replicate it throughout an entire body of work while keeping it interesting and fun. And that’s what he did for 25 years.

     

     CM: Why do you think the Blue Dog resonates with so many people?

     

     JR: It’s an every man. It doesn’t provide any answers and that’s what art should do. It should ask questions.

     

     The Rodrigue: Houston exhibit at West Avenue at River Oaks, 2nd Floor, runs through July 19. It’s free and open to the public Tuesday through Saturday (10 a.m.-6 p.m.) and Sunday (12-5 p.m.). Extended hours from 6 p.m.- 9 p.m on July 16. On July 18, there will be a Family Day & Booking Signing. On July 19, Jacques Rodrigue will give a lecture at 1 p.m.

    That original Blue Dog painting, Watch Dog, is on display for the first time in Houston.

    Houston, Rodrigue Exhibit at West Ave, June 2015, Watch Dog
      
    Courtesy photo
    That original Blue Dog painting, Watch Dog, is on display for the first time in Houston.
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    Best July & August Theater

    Broadway hits and Shakespeare festival headline Houston's 12 best summer shows

    Tarra Gaines
    Jul 1, 2025 | 9:30 am
    Broadway at the Hobby Center presents Parade
    Photo by Joan Marcus
    Broadway at the Hobby Center presents Parade

    Lions and tigers and zebras and murder. Oh, my! From big blockbuster shows to annual chilly thrillers, summertime is some of the best time for theater in Houston. Shakespeare, jukebox musicals, mysteries, and madcap comedies always headline our summer must-sees. This year is no different, but we’re also got intriguing musical dramas, Tony Award winning Broadway shows, bittersweet love stories, and even a local world premiere. There’s no place like Houston for summer theater.

    The Wizard of Oz at A.D. Players (July 9-August 10)
    Something wicked this way comes from A.D. Players this summer. Yes, long before the musical told from certain witches’ perspectives, L. Frank Baum’s original journey to Oz began with a Kansas girl’s ride on a tornado. She found a magical and musical land filled lively lions, tin men, and scarecrows. Follow the yellow brick road to classic songs like “Over the Rainbow” and “We’re Off to See the Wizard,” but after a great adventure, learn that enduring message that there’s no place like home. Our favorite Galleria area Players say this newly imagined production will have incredible production values to delight the whole family.

    Crabs in a Bucket at MATCH (July 10-19)
    This satire comes by Houston-raised, nationally acclaimed playwright Bernardo Cubría gets its first regional production with a stellar local cast. Amargo and Pootz are two bitter crabs living in a shucking bucket. They spend their days judging the other crabs that got out, the ones who couldn't take it, and the losers who still live among them. When a new crab arrives filled with hope and change, they are faced with who they once were and their incessant dream of getting the shuck out. Any similarities between this crabby circumstance and human relationships are purely intentional.

    The Mirror Crack’d at Alley Theatre (July 11-August 17)
    Move over Hercule Poirot and you too Sherlock, because it takes a woman to untangle all the mysterious threads of jealousy, lies, and ambition in those seemingly charming English towns. One of Agatha Christie’s greatest detectives, Miss Marple, uses a cheerful and kind-auntie demeanor to disguise a keen intellect and nose for solving crime. For this Miss Marple case, the filming of a star-studded movie in a quaint village leads to a chilling murder, and everyone becomes a suspect. The Alley’s annual Summer Chills mystery production is usually one of their most popular shows, but this one will also make a bit of theatrical history as this production of the Christie classic, adapted by Rachel Wagstaff, marks the first time iconic sleuth Miss Marple has appeared on the U.S. stage.

    The 39 Steps at Main Street Theater (July 12-August 10)
    The classic Alfred Hitchcock spy thriller becomes exhilarating comic mayhem onstage when performed by just four actors. The original 39 Steps film is the story of an ordinary man accused of a murder he did not commit after he accidentally becomes involved with a mysterious and deadly woman. He must then go on the run over the English and Scottish countryside trying to allude both the police and an international spy ring attempting to steal British military secrets. In this hilarious parody adaptation by Patrick Barlow, the four actors leap in and out of over 150 characters, sometimes playing multiple roles in the span of seconds while also performing dynamic chase scenes, including an onstage plane crash. Look for some of our local favs to get quite the theatrical workout in this breakneck comedy.

    Parade presented by Broadway at the Hobby Center (July 15-20)
    For the penultimate show of Broadway at Hobby’s 24-25 season, they’re bringing in the 2023 Tony Award winner for Best Revival of a Musical. Set at the turn of the 20th century, the dramatic and still very timely story chronicles what happens when murder, politics, and prejudice meet during a sensationalized murder trial. Based on a true story, Parade depicts newlywed Jewish couple, Leo and Lucille Frank, struggling to make a home and find community in Georgia. When Leo is accused of an unspeakable crime, it propels them into an unimaginable test of faith, humanity, justice, and devotion. Riveting and complex, Parade reminds us that to love, we must truly see one another.

    Iolanthe from the Gilbert and Sullivan Society of Houston (July 19-27)
    We always look forward this annual summer performance treat, as Houston’s own esteemed Gilbert and Sullivan Society presents another opera gem from the Gilbert and Sullivan treasure trove of musicals. Marrying fantasy and satire, Iolanthe is set in a magical version of England filled with both snobby aristocrats and equally smug faeries. The fairy and human world clash when Strephon, the half-fairy, half-human son of the title character falls in love with the lovely human Phyllis, a ward of the Lord Chancellor. Chaos ensues amid a lively and beautiful score as the fairies interfere in British politics, elevating Strephon to Parliament and upending tradition. The comic opera skews the British legal system, the House of Lords, and Victorian sensibilities all with clever lyrics. Keeping with the fairytale setting, the production design will showcase dreamy lighting, larger-than-life flora set pieces, and costumes inspired by whimsical bugs.

    The Last Five Years at Queensbury Theatre (July 23-27)
    When this bitter sweet musical made its debut in the early 2000s, it garnered lots of critics and audience acclaim with its fresh way to tell its love story, simultaneously from both the ending and beginning. Cathy, an aspiring actress, sings their story from the end of their marriage looking back, while Jamie, a rising novelist, begins with their first meeting full of sparks and attraction. The musical tellings of their love and loss cross just once, with a wedding song they sing together in the middle of the show. Then, fate pulls them apart. Queensbury plans on updating the already innovative show for our cell phone-obsessed digital age. The show will blend live performance with social media and technology to reflect how we connect, communicate, and fall apart today. Get ready for a fresh take on this iconic musical, where texts, tweets, and time collide.

    Honky Tonk Laundry at Stages (July 25-August 17)
    The history of this show at Stages has all of the highs and lows of a real honky tonk song. The feel-good musical created by Roger Bean, who also brought the world The Marvelous Wonderettes, was supposed to be one of the first shows through the wash cycle when Stages’ Gordy campus opened back in 2020, but the pandemic put it on hold after only a week of shows. Stages did release a streaming version of the show, but now it’s back in its full live and in-person glory. The title says it all as a woman tries to turn an inherited washeteria into a honky tonk club. Two unlikely friends spin suds, stories, and songs by Reba, Dolly, Carrie, and more. This musical load contains over 20 country hits, including “Before He Cheats,” “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’,” and “Wide Open Spaces.” At the center of all the sudsy songs is a story of friendship, grit, and finding your voice, one spin at a time.

    Houston Shakespeare Festival at Miller Outdoor Theatre (July 31-August 8)
    It wouldn’t be summer without free Shakespeare productions at Miller thanks in no small part to the University of Houston School of Theatre & Dance. This year brings a bard-tacular pairing with one of the great history plays, Henry V, and the effervescent comedy, As You Like It. Henry V lets us explore the qualities of leadership in all its challenges, complexities, and compromises as the young English king attempts to claim the French throne via battlefields and princess wooing. As You Like It marries some of Shakespeare’s best comic tropes including women disguised as men and urbanities losing their way, and sometimes sanity, in forests. Mix in some brotherly hate, mistaken identity, mixed up lovers, and a happy ending, and what’s not to like. The annual festival also offers some of the greatest roles for young regional actors getting their professional start and local favorites who have graced many a Houston stage.

    Life of Pi presented by Broadway at the Hobby Center (August 19-24)
    The Broadway at the Hobby Center 24-25 season ends not with a musical, but with this epic play. Based on the internationally award-winning novel and visually stunning film, this show won three Tony Awards and the Olivier Award for Best Play. After a shipwreck in the middle of the Pacific Ocean, a sixteen-year-old boy named Pi survives on a lifeboat with four companions: a hyena, a zebra, an orangutan and a Royal Bengal tiger. On this makeshift, floating menagerie, boy and animals must survive together. Told with jaw-dropping visuals, world class puppetry and exquisite stagecraft, this beguiling show creates a breathtaking journey filled with wonder, awe and joy.

    While Childhood Slept from Garden Theatre (August 15-17)
    This emotional musical has some deep Houston history, as it had its world premiere here in 1999. It later received an off-Broadway reading, and its finale number, “We Will Not Forget,” was featured in the documentary Paperclips. In 2005, a revised version with new songs was performed once again in Houston. Based on a true story of the boys of Home Number One in the Nazi concentration camp, Terezin, the musical chronicles how the children create a secret republic within the camp, publishing their own magazine of art, poetry, and short stories. A visit from The Red Cross presents the opportunity to disguise their magazine as a secret message and a means of escape. The show will be produced in partnership with Holocaust Museum Houston.

    The Chosen Ones from Thunderclap Productions (August 28-September 6)
    While we have many new takes on classic stories on stages across the city this summer, if you’re looking for something new with some timely resonance, don’t miss this world premiere musical, by local and award winning playwright Aaron Alon. The show chronicles the stories of a group of LGBTQ+ teens sent to a conversion therapy summer camp, led by an “ex-gay” minister. With humor, sorrow, and hope the Chosen Ones explores themes of living authentically, found families, and defying conventions. Look for a large cast of fresh and up and coming local performers in this funny and moving musical, which is also a part of Thunderclap’s John Steven Kellett Memorial Series of works relating to LGBTQ+ equity.

    Broadway at the Hobby Center presents Parade
      

    Photo by Joan Marcus

    Broadway at the Hobby Center presents Parade.

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