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    What Time Is It?

    Houston's historic clock tower gets new life: Market Square Park to be awash in computer chimes

    Joel Luks
    Sep 27, 2013 | 8:47 am

    Bell towers, the type that anchor public spaces, used to perform a vital everyday function. In addition to signaling the time of day, the tolling of the bells served as a call to worship, marked special occasions such as weddings and funerals, even indicated that danger may be looming ahead.

    But with the advent of personal timepieces and cellphones, the role of the bell tower no longer has practical relevance, although it may still retain historical nostalgia of times gone by.

    When media sculptor and installation artist Jo Ann Fleischhauer was approached by the Houston Arts Alliance and the Blaffer Art Museum to execute a project that would activate an unused space — a project that followed along the same lines as Blaffer's partnership with collector Jim Petersen in Window into Houston — the Louis and Annie Friedman Clock Tower that overlooks Market Square Park, located on the corner of Travis Street and Congress Avenue, posed an interesting dilemma.

    "The more I looked at the bell tower — standing there, idle, in disrepair, as people buzzed by, some stopped to notice it, others didn't even know it was there in the first place — I felt there was an inner dialogue that needed to be explored through art," Fleischhauer says.

    Fleischhauer's What Time Is It? documents that conversation. The installation debuts on Saturday alongside a performance by contemporary music presenter Musiqa that includes the world premiere of an electronic music score by Musiqa artistic director Anthony K. Brandt and electroacoustic specialist Chapman Welch.

    Houston History

    "I needed to find a way to liberate the clock tower from mere function. Something that would compel passersby to stop, think, meditate, contemplate the different meanings and implications of the concept of time."

    The monument blends into the surrounding architectural landscape, forgotten and disregarded by many. The foggy history of its parts, however, dates back to before the turn of the 20th century. Cast in 1876 by A. Fulton's Son and Co. in Pittsburgh, the 2,800-pound bell is original to the third Houston City Hall that burned down in 1903.

    The clock was commissioned from the Seth Thomas Clock Co. to the tune of $1,100 in 1904 to be a part of the fourth city hall. Sometime during the 1960s, the clock went missing. It was found in 1988 in Woodville, East Texas, and returned to its rightful proprietor.

    The current architecture, designed by the Mathes Group, was built in 1996.

    "I needed to find a way to liberate the clock tower from mere function," Fleischhauer says." Something that would compel passersby to stop, think, meditate, contemplate the different meanings and implications of the concept of time. With life going at the speed of light, how could I make time stand still — if only for an instant?"

    Do you have a minute?

    Fleischhauer encapsulated the duality of inextinguishable motion and the impression of stillness. She installed walls of mirrors inside the tower columns to make the architecture disappear within itself, an effect that's analogous with how the the monument recedes into the urban panorama, both physically and perceptually. Fleischhauer also designed four round, mainly monochromatic, backlit clock faces to be positioned inside the mechanism in an effort to breathe new purpose into the antiquated structure.

    Each translucent display, printed on Mylar and affixed to Plexiglass, reflects on a different perspective on the idea of time.

    Fleischhauer quotes text that Galileo Galilei wrote in 1610 when he discovered the four moons of Jupiter, a finding that paved the way for the development of a method that measured longitude based on orbital patterns, within a muted blue veneer to comment on storied attempts to quantify celestial movement. In a second face, a black-and-white scheme cocoons poetry of T. S. Eliot and writings of Stephen Hawking as means to survey the psychological awareness of time.

    For the third face, Fleischhauer turns to astronomer Carl Sagan and the 1977 Voyager Golden Records that attempted to capture the essence of life on earth. The design, which radiates with warm reds, oranges, yellows and a hint of pink, considers time capsules. In the fourth and final face, Fleischhauer juxtaposes brain scans — which appear melted, somewhat like Salvador Dalí's The Persistence of Memory — as a bridge between art and science.

    "Turning the clock tower into a performative space would contribute to making the monument rejoin the community."

    But there was something missing, she admits.

    "There's a soundscape that's an inherent part of a clock tower," Fleischhauer says. "I'd always wanted to collaborate with Musiqa and Anthony Brandt as he has the same fascination with the integration of art and science. This was the perfect opportunity."

    For whom the bell tolls

    Brandt seized the challenge and timed Musiqa's opening performance, titled "Time Travel," for the reveal of Fleischhauer's installation.

    "What I've learned from studying neuroscience is that the brain needs change," Brandt explains. "Turning the clock tower into a performative space would contribute to making the monument rejoin the community."

    Brandt and Welch's What Time Is It?, in response to Fleischhauer's context, is a six-month, tolling, organized performance of a set of computerized sampled sounds. Beginning on Saturday at the performance, and sounding every hour on the hour from at 7 a.m. to midnight, technology concealed within the clock tower will devise a short composition based on a finite number of variables.

    "We realized our musical framework based on the Western classical system of 12 major chords, with C major at noon and at midnight," Brandt says. "The register is set to follow the organic rise and fall of the sun. For those who visit Market Square Park often, we hope that in time guests would become familiar with the ascending and descending of the musical patterns."

    The software, created through the Max/MSP programming platform, manipulates sound recorded at Market Square and filters it to render pure musical tones.

    "We wanted the music to evoke the sound language of a bell but without an explicit connection to the bell."

    "These tones are combined into chords that retain some of the dynamic character of the square — such as the crescendo of a passing bus," Welch explains. "The program plays one of these chords every hour, and each hour has a corresponding chord that plays at the same time each day. While the hour chord is playing, the computer improvises additional chords and rhythms that are also created from the sounds of the square."

    The improvisations are calculated at random so that not two performances are alike.

    The computer selects one of 12 scripts available. Four are fast, four are slow and the remaining four change speed. The program limits each script to one occurrence per day.

    "We wanted the music to evoke the sound language of a bell but without an explicit connection to the bell," Brandt adds. "It's how the music orbits around the clock tower, both accepting it and rejecting it, amid its setting, in a poetic fashion."

    The collaboration also includes the works of six student composers, three from Rice University and three from the University of Houston, to be performed once a month in a noon time concert. Every concert will start with the tolling of the bell followed by a work for solo trumpet, another for two trumpets and another for three trumpets. The cumulative effect will be executed from the tower's staircase.

    ____

    Musiqa presents "Time Travel" and Jo Ann Fleischhauer unveils What Time Is It? on Saturday, 7:30 p.m., at Market Square Park. The event is free and open to the public.

    Major support comes from the Houston Downtown Management District and the City of Houston through Houston Arts Alliance. Community partners include Houston Parks and Recreation Department, the Moores School of Music at the University of Houston and the Shepherd School of Music at Rice University.

    Lunar Brain juxtaposes brain scans as a bridge between art and science.

    Musiqa preview September 2013 Lunar Brain
      
    Photo courtesy of Jo Ann Fleischhauer
    Lunar Brain juxtaposes brain scans as a bridge between art and science.
    unspecified
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    weekend event planner

    Here are the 15 best things to do in Houston this weekend

    Craig D. Lindsey
    Jun 18, 2025 | 6:30 pm
    Morgan Wallen
    Photo courtesy of Morgan Wallen
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    Juneteenth is on Thursday, June 19, which means those who want to celebrate will find plenty of events happening across Houston this weekend. We’re talking about such gatherings as the Children’s Museum Houston’s Juneteenth celebration, the Juneteenth 160 Fest, and Club Sienna’s Juneteenth Jubilee, just to name a few.

    But we also have the all-star return of Comicpalooza, live performances from a country bad-boy and a neo-soul legend, a YouTube show getting an early jump on celebrating DJ Screw Day, and the 20th anniversary of a movie that we wish we knew how to quit.

    Thursday, June 19

    Buffalo Bayou Partnership presents Underground Sounds: Sarah Grace Graves - “Three Names”
    All this weekend, the Underground Sounds series in the Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern returns, featuring Sarah Grace Graves performing her composition "Three Names," which is inspired by the vast, unique architecture of the Cistern and arranged especially for its natural acoustics. Graves is a composer and vocal performer working at the intersection between ritual and recital. She pulls inspiration from a variety of media, including classical literature and archival music recordings, to weave together stories through a blend of compositions and improvisation. 6 pm.

    Plot Swap Theater presents Pheromones
    Best friends Lucy and Vic slide into a downtown lounge, where Lucy unveils a slim vial she swears will make its wearer irresistible, putting their handsome waiter Danny in the crosshairs. Whether the pheromones ignite romance, trigger disaster, or expose deeper rifts between the friends is decided live by the audience. Pheromones is an intimately hilarious choose‑your‑adventure story, performed for only 10 guests per night. Through Thursday, July 24. 7 pm.

    The River Oaks Theatre presents When Houston Had the Blues
    When Houston Had the Blues focuses on the city’s rich (but sadly unheralded) history of great Black music. No other city can claim giants such as Lightnin' Hopkins, Big Mama Thornton, Clarence Gatemouth Brown, Bobby Blue Bland, Albert King, and Albert Collins, plus Black-owned labels like Duke and Peacock. The doc features new interviews with Billy Gibbons, CJ Chenier, Grady Gaines, and others. Producer Drew Barnett-Hamilton and Houston blues artists Trudy Lynn and Steve Krase will be around for a post-screening Q&A. 7:15 pm.

    Friday, June 20

    Comicpalooza
    The three-day pop culture con Comicpalooza is back, featuring vendors from all over the galaxy, programming covering a multitude of fandoms, special attractions intriguing the curious minds, panels featuring this year’s guests, and other geeky entertainment. Celebrity guests will include Hayden Christensen, Cheech Marin and Tommy Chong, Anthony Michael Hall, Patton Oswalt, Ming-Na Wen, WWE wrestlers, the cast of Resident Alien (including Alice Wetterlund, who will be at Punch Line Houston this weekend), and more. 1 pm (9 am Saturday and Sunday).

    Asia Society Texas Center presents AsiaFest
    AsiaFest celebrates the rich diversity of Houston’s Asian and Asian American communities through performances, art-making activities, food, live demonstrations, and more. The event will feature Asia's different regions' traditions, cultures, and food. Guests will get to interact with a dragon boat display on their front lawn, tour Asia Society Texas' exhibition "Hung Hsien: Between Worlds," and more. 5 pm.

    Morgan Wallen in concert
    Country star Morgan Wallen may not have dug hanging around at Saturday Night Live a few months back (he quickly bounced during the goodnights and later posted “Get me to God’s country” on his Instagram page), but he’ll be sticking around in Houston this weekend. He’ll be performing not one, but two shows at NRG Stadium, in support of his new album, I'm The Problem. Well, at least the man knows he’s got issues. 5:30 pm. (Saturday, 5:30 pm).

    Maxwell in concert
    The last time ‘90s neo-soul pioneer Maxwell performed here was in October, as his tour (which celebrated the 15th anniversary of his 2009 comeback album BLACKsummers’night) made a stop at the Toyota Center. Now, he’s returning to H-Town territory, preparing to rock the house over at Sugar Land’s Smart Financial Centre. So, if you conceived children while listening to his baby-making jams (or if you were conceived during a Maxwell song and you just wanna see what the hype is all about), Maxwell will be here to give you a little sumthin’ sumthin’. 8 pm.

    Saturday, June 21

    River Oaks District presents Motor Mornings with Post Oak Motor Cars
    River Oaks District invites car enthusiasts, collectors, and industry insiders to its Motor Mornings – presented by Post Oak Motor Cars – to see an extraordinary lineup of supercars and hypercars, including bespoke Bentleys, roaring Lamborghinis, and sleek Bugattis. Automotive aficionados can come together to enjoy a curated collection of some of the most coveted vehicles in the world to connect over shared passion and engineering perfection. This event is open to the public and will offer live music and complimentary coffee for attendees. 8 am.

    Kroger 70th Anniversary Celebration
    The nationwide grocery chain will mark 70 years of Houston operations with a party at its store in the Heights (1035 N. Shepherd). The first 70 customers through the door at 10 am will have the opportunity to buy seven items for just $0.70 each. Everyone else will enjoy wine tastings, gift card raffles, Winfield's Chocolate Bar giveaways, an appearance by the Texans cheerleaders, and activities for kids. To mark the occasion, Kroger will donate $35,000 to the Houston Food Bank. 10 am.

    Morgan Wallen
      
    Photo courtesy of Morgan Wallen

    Morgan Wallen is performing Friday and Saturday.

    Spin the Block at Screwed Up Records and Tapes
    Spin the Block, the new YouTube show where DJs and influencers take over a local Houston space and have a nice little kickback, will be at Screwed Up Records and Tapes this weekend, just in time for DJ Screw Day next weekend. Rock/hip-hop duo Blaze x Black will be performing as well as hosting, along with King Borris. DJ Pablo Barre will provide the beats, and food trucks and other vendors will be outside. Noon.

    Nate Jackson: Super Funny World Tour
    Stand-up comedian, actor, and viral sensation Nate Jackson is taking his signature high-energy comedy on the road with the Super Funny World Tour. His blend of sharp wit, relatable humor, and unmatched physical comedy has made him a favorite both on social media and in live performances, where he sells out comedy clubs and theaters across America. See him before his first Netflix special drops in July. 7 pm.

    Houston Symphony presents Disney and Pixar’s Up in Concert
    In Up, the quirky duo of Carl, a cantankerous 78-year-old balloon salesman, and Russell, an adventurous 8-year-old stowaway, embark on a laugh-out-loud and touching journey to a hidden world full of thrills and surprises. The 2009 Disney/Pixar tearjerker will be projected on a massive screen, accompanied by the Houston Symphony performing Michael Giacchino’s Academy Award-winning score live. 7:30 pm (2 pm Sunday).

    Sunday, June 22

    Laura Rathe Fine Art presents "A World Within" opening reception
    "A World Within," a group exhibition featuring Lucrecia Waggoner, Carly Allen Martin, Audra Weaser, and Sandrine Kern, is that quiet, internal space we all carry. A place shaped by memory, emotion, and the small moments that do not always have language. A world where past experiences and passing thoughts live side by side, building emotional landscapes that feel intimate and vast at the same time. Each artist offers a different entry point into this space, a glimpse into their inner world. Through Monday, August 4. Noon.

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents "From India to the World: Textiles from the Parpia Collection" opening day
    A celebration of artistic mastery and cultural exchange, "From India to the World: Textiles from the Parpia Collection" showcases the Museum’s recent acquisition of Indian textiles from the holdings of New York-based Banoo and Jeevak Parpia, who have assembled one of the most significant private collections of its kind outside India. This exhibition offers a rich cross-section of India’s textile traditions, from intricate court silks to boldly patterned cottons, dazzling tie-dyes, and masterfully woven ikats. Through Sunday, September 14. 12:30 pm.

    Alamo Drafthouse LaCenterra presents Brokeback Mountain: 20th Anniversary
    Winner of three Academy Awards including Best Director, Brokeback Mountain is a sweeping epic that explores the lives of two young men, a ranch hand and a rodeo cowboy, who meet in the summer of 1963 and unexpectedly forge a lifelong connection. The complications, joys, and heartbreak they experience provide a testament to the endurance and power of love. The late Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal deliver emotionally charged, remarkably moving performances. 6 pm (9:30 pm Sunday).

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