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    Calendar Closeup

    Your weekly guide to Houston: Five (plus) don't-miss events — including chicken raising

    Joel Luks
    Jul 25, 2013 | 10:17 am

    On tap this week are museum adventures, a chick lecture, a mobile fashion shopping event, a naughty nun, a class for raw foodies and cell phone art at one of the city's top galleries.

    Try this: Click on the links below each event to make planning easier. You'll find a page with helpful features, like the ability to download the deets to your electronic calendar, as well as insider intel on where to eat, drink and shop en route to your city adventures.

    The Museum Experience

    No longer is Museum District Day an exhausting trek to take in every building in the area in less that 24 hours. Organizers split the day-long event into quarterly happenings that focus on a particular section of the cultural network. This weekend gears up for Zone 3, which comprises the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Jung Center and the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, and includes activities at all three locations.

    Here's what to do: Partake in a Zentagle workshop (an art form that gets its name from repeating geometrical patterns) at the Jung Center from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m., and make your own pyramid book from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. at MFAH as a nod to the exhibition Gifts from the Past.

    The skinny: Saturday, 10-7 p.m.; Museum District; admission is free.

    Introduction to Chickens with John Berry

    Keeping chickens is allowed in Houston environs but only if you are wealthy enough to own a big property. Poultry is required to be at least 100 feet away from neighbors. Not all is lost, though, as a new city ordinance may change all that and make it easier for urban dwellers with a penchant for locavore cuisine to raise their own.

    This lecture, led by fowl guru John Berry, pores over the basics of poultry. Perhaps fresh eggs from your backyard are in your future?

    The skinny: Saturday, 1:30 p.m.; Wabash Antiques & Feed; admission is free.

    Fashion Truck Festival

    Taking notes from the food truck movement that gave birth to Houston's first food truck park, the fashion-on-wheels merchants of the city are following suit, sort of. This one-day shopping festival brings together Height of Vintage, Shoe Bar, Trunk Show Mobile Boutique and Urban Izzy in one location, and welcomes the Billy Pilgrim Traveling Library and the Picasso Bus to complement the fleet.

    The skinny: Saturday, 6 p.m.; Liberty Station; admission is free.

    Stages Repertory Theatre presents Late Nite Catechism: Sister Rolls the Dice

    Just because this wicked sister wears the traditional God-fearing attire doesn't mean that she abides by divine law. Regardless of her leanings, perchance spiritual prowess is on her side — in Vegas? The trials and tribulations of this witty character performed by Denise Fennell brings back another chapter in the Late Nite Catechism series at Stages Repertory Theatre. This vestal knows bingo, so how difficult could organizing a saintly gambling soirée be?

    Oy vei! She's about to find out.

    The skinny: Runs through Sept. 1; Stages Repertory Theatre; tickets start at $23.

    Eat it Raw: Preparing Raw, Organic and Seasonal Meals

    Trust Kristina Carrillo-Bucaram, the founder of Rawfully Organic Co-op, to simplify the steps toward adding more raw fruits and vegetables in your life. If someone can clean up anyone's diet, it's this produce queen who's earned a reputation for uncooking up a storm to serve up dishes that satisfy cravings for unhealthy fare.

    I could surely use a nutritional tune-up. Be honest. I am sure you could, too.

    The skinny: Sunday, 2 p.m.; Houston Arboretum and Nature Center; $20 for arboretum members; $30 general public.

    Smarty pants and in-the-loop arts maven Nancy Wozny's pick: Lillian Warren's Alone Together at Anya Tish Gallery

    Nancy says: "Who could imagine a mashup of beauty and melancholy in observing a bunch of people waiting around looking at the their cell phones? Houston artist Lillian Warren captures that exact essence in her latest show, Alone Together, at Anya Tish Gallery, in conjunction with ArtHouston 2013.

    "Warren, a master of making the ordinary extraordinary, contrasts a barren waitscape of isolation with vivid, watery and fluid use of color and form. What's so compelling to me about this new batch of work is how the portrayal of lonesomeness she so thoroughly investigated in her earlier landscapes of conveniences stores and traffic lights carries over to these new paintings of people."

    The skinny: Through Aug. 24; Anya Tish Gallery; admission is free.

    Fashion-on-wheels merchants gather for the Fashion Truck Festival at Liberty Station.

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    preserve Houston's history

    Preservationists stage last-ditch attempt to save historic Houston theatre

    Emily Cotton
    Feb 17, 2026 | 3:30 pm
    Garden Oaks Theatre protest
    Courtesy of Arthouse Houston
    Community members rally to preserve the Garden Oaks Theatre.

    Houstonians residing in the Heights, Garden Oaks, and far beyond were thrown into a tizzy last week by the abrupt news that the Garden Oaks Theater had been purchased by commercial developers in a $7.1 million, off-market deal.

    Within a matter of days, demolition permits were granted, sewer lines disconnected from the city, and — as of Monday night — construction fencing was placed around the property. Both Preservation Houston and Arthouse Houston, an offshoot of the Friends of River Oaks Theatre, have voiced concerns over the apparent plans to raze the Art Deco building before the community has had time to react to the news.

    Built in 1947, the Garden Oaks Theater is one of several post-war Houston theaters designed for the Interstate Circuit by H.F. Pettigrew and John A. Worley of the Dallas firm Pettigrew & Worley, alongside its sister cinema, the River Oaks Theatre. It is a classic example of streamlined Art Deco design — an architectural gem that connects Houston’s everyday streetscape to its cinematic past.

    Arthouse Houston has been sitting on preservation plans for the theater for years, waiting for it to be sold by the church that had owned and utilized the building since the 1990s. The 700-plus seat theater, along with its stage, has retained its original architectural details and features throughout the years, save for a short stage extension project carried out by the church.

    Developers have not responded to proposals by Arthouse Houston to either buy or lease the movie theater to return it to its original use while simultaneously operating as a community arts center and much needed “third place.”

    According to State of Texas records, parties involved include the Heights Equity Trust, Sage Equity Partners, and Heights Investment Fund, LLC. None of these entities have responded to CultureMap’s request for comment about their plans for the property.

    Jim Parsons, programs and communications director for Preservation Houston, issued this statement to CultureMap:

    “The Garden Oaks Theater and buildings like it give the city a sense of identity. People don't just recognize these places, they remember them. Houston is always changing, but when we treat historic architecture as disposable, we risk losing the landmarks that anchor neighborhoods and give them character.”

    Maureen McNamara, Arthouse Houston’s co-founder and director, is hoping that developers took note of the “save the theater” rally that took place at the theater on Sunday, February 15, and may have a change of heart. Coverage of the rally by ABC13 was widely circulated on social media, so it’s unlikely that the developers are unaware of the public outcry to save the theater — and is what likely led to fencing going up only a day later.

    “We feel like we’re pretty well poised to step in and help investors to incorporate the theater into a larger project, and the first step is to make sure that we win them over,” McNamara tells CultureMap. “Part of winning them over is making sure they know how much the community cares, and seeing how beautiful and dynamic restoring our historical buildings and theaters can be.”

    The restoration of River Oaks Theatre and the attention that project has brought to the area is something McNamara is confident she can replicate.

    “There are nonprofit organizations all over the US saving and running historic theaters as community arts centers, and arts and film centers — there are models for this. Austin just did a big push with the Paramount Theatre,” says McNamara. “I’d like for it [Garden Oaks Theater] to exist for its original purpose — at least in part, as a movie theater — with some live theater components as well.”

    A petition on change.org has already garnered more than 1,000 signatures. In addition, Arthouse Houston will attend a Houston City Council meeting on Wednesday, February 18, at 9 am to discuss what there is to be done about this situation. McNamara encourages people to join them.

    “We would love any help we can get getting people there, signing up to speak if possible — it would be great to have a crowd there.”

    Garden Oaks Theatre protest

    Courtesy of Arthouse Houston

    Community members rally to preserve the Garden Oaks Theatre.

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