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    Listen up, Ru Paul!

    Drag Queens, death and Texas: Many stories in the house of Sandra Cisneros

    Tarra Gaines
    Oct 11, 2015 | 12:00 pm

    Sandra Cisneros, beloved and best selling author of The House on Mango Street, Woman Hollering Creek and Caramelo, recipient of a MacArthur Foundation “genius” fellowship and a Texas Medal for the Arts, would like me to take time out of this profile of author Sandra Cisneros to mention that if RuPaul should by some chance be reading this, she’d really like to be a guest judge on RuPaul’s Drag Race.

    To be fair, I was the one who brought up the whole Drag Race subject while speaking to her by phone about her forthcoming visit to Texas and her new book, A House of My Own.

    While the book is being called a memoir, Cisneros thinks of it more as many “stories” from her life. I wanted to ask her how she classified the book because it’s a bit of hybrid. At first it seems like a collection of essays and lectures she’s written over many decades, but when read linearly they become something of an autobiography, a group of true stories that together tell the tale of how a young woman writer searched for and found many homes of her own.

    “I think it’s a kind of memoir,” she described. “But you know I’ve always been writing from borderlands. My poetry reads like fiction and my fiction reads like poetry, so I’ve always written things that defy genres.”

    Impersonating Sandra Cisneros

    In one of those stories from her life, “Straw into Gold,” which was originally a lecture she gave at the University of Texas while living in Austin in the 1980s, the older Cisneros of 2015 makes a footnote to this story to tell the readers all the things she would have preferred to be instead of a writer, including: milliner, cartoon voice-over actor, popcorn vender and lastly, judge on RuPaul’s Drag Race.

    This brought us to our discussion on why she would make a great judge. She’s not only a big fan of the show, watching it regularly when she lived in San Antonio and then subscribing to a pay TV service after she moved to Mexico, she even binge watched while she worked on A House of My Own. She wanted RuPaul to write a blurb for the book, but that dream didn’t come true.

    I learned very early in my talk with Cisneros that asking her even the silliest of questions can lead to detours into both the hilarious and the profound, and one about why RuPaul should pick her to guest judge on his competitive reality show was no exception. That quick question diverted us into a conversation about the nature of femininity:

    “Drag Queens are about imitating femininity so that they’re more feminine than women, and I try to do that too. That’s why I think should be a judge on RuPaul’s Drag Race.”

    Which led her to a self-evaluation of her own relationship with femininity: “I’m a kind of female impersonator. Female impersonators really are more female than females. Females are restricted by patriarchal society. Female impersonators are not. Women have to be terrified of what men might say, or their mothers. ‘I can’t look like that; I’ll look slutty.’ But female impersonators don’t have to think like that.”

    When I offered that maybe female impersonators are even rewarded for not thinking that way. Her immediate affirmative then lead to this remarkable realization: “I guess maybe I’ve lived my life as a female impersonator without knowing it.”

    Leaving Texas

    The irony of A House of My Own, which chronicles her trying on different homes for size and ending up settling for many years in Texas, is that recently she found her infamous purple then pink San Antonio home — with its closets filled with enough parasols, opera gloves, feathered boas and tiaras to satisfy the most fashionable drag queen — was not the home for her anymore. She has since moved to central Mexico, but not before giving anyway many of her possessions.

    When I asked her what the emotional toll was in leaving another home, she compared it to death, but a most delightful passing away.

    “I felt like I died — and a part of me did die — and I was the executor giving away my material possessions, finding homes for my art, finding home for my animals, everything that had mattered, a record of my life. I was shedding. It was a good feeling. I didn’t feel sad. I feel like I did when I looked at my house in that last paragraph of the book: let’s go. I’m ready. I felt very happy,” she described.

    It was around this time that Texas State University came calling not for her art, animals or even the boas but to acquire her literary archives for their Wittliff Collections. So while her new home is across the border, much of the creative work she did here will stay in Texas.

    “I’m so happy that the archives are going some place that they’ll be respected and taken care of. It was important that they stay in Texas and they stay in an institution that I felt respected me. It was important that people who are studying my work have to come to Texas. You have to if you’re going to study my work.” she said.

    As a Chicago native, when she first moved to San Antonio she felt sometimes like an interloper, a carpetbagger, but now after living here for decades she’s quite happy to return to Texas as a tourist.

    “One of the trick I realized of Texas is that if you come as a guest, you get treated really well.”

    Sandra Cisneros reads from A House of My Own at Stude Concert Hall, Rice University as part of the Inprint Margarett Root Brown Series. The event is now sold out.

    Author Sandra Cisneros has moved from San Antonio to Mexico.

    Sandra Cisneros
    Photo by Alan Goldfarb
    Author Sandra Cisneros has moved from San Antonio to Mexico.
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    Best March Art

    9 new art museum and gallery exhibits opening in Houston this month

    Tarra Gaines
    Mar 9, 2026 | 6:00 pm
    Ernesto Neto, SunForceOceanLife (installation view), 2020, crocheted textile and
plastic balls, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Museum purchase funded by the
Caroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment Fund
    © 2020 Ernesto Neto / photograph by Albert Sanchez
    Ernesto Neto, SunForceOceanLife (installation view), 2020, crocheted textile and plastic balls, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Museum purchase funded by the Caroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment Fund

    As spring returns so does a flowering of biannual, annual, and biennial art festivals and events this month. Art blooms indoors in Houston's favorite museums but also on the city's streets, parks, and even waterways. Lots of immersive art invites viewers to journey into the picture.

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston gets contemplative, and the Menil Collection displays some rare recent gifts. If that’s not enough art for one month, FotoFest celebrates a big anniversary, and the yearly “Night Light” art party heads downtown.

    “Global Visions – FotoFest at 40” programming across Houston (March)
    Marking four decades of photographic arts and education programming in Houston, this 2026 FotoFest looks back on key works and themes from the 20 previous biennials between 1986 and 2024. With participating art galleries and museums around the city offering special photography exhibitions over the next several month, FotoFest will feature more than 450 artists from the United States and 58 countries. Curated by FotoFest co-founder and former artistic director Wendy Watriss and FotoFest executive director Steven Evans, with co-curators Annick Dekiouk and Madi Murphy, “Global Visions” will explore some of the previous festival themes including geography, identity, war, ecology, and social change, while also celebrating FotoFest’s global reach and impact. Look for auctions, tours, conversations, art walks, and workshops as part of the programming.

    “Buddha/Nature: Five Dialogues on a Shared World” at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (now through May 10)
    Ancient and contemporary art converse in this extraordinary new exhibition at the MFAH that explores key teachings of Buddhism centered on how we engage with the natural world. The exhibition is organized crossed five thematically focused galleries, including Samsara, Impermanence, Karma, Compassion, and Awakening. Each gallery features one of five ancient Buddhist sculptures from the Xuzhou Collection, a private collection of Buddhist masterpieces, along with works by international and Texas contemporary artists.

    “This exhibition brings ancient Buddhist sculptures into dynamic dialogue with contemporary art,” explains Hao Sheng, consulting curator to the MFAH and organizing curator of the exhibition. “These sacred objects take on new resonance when paired with modern works that explore fundamental questions about existence and harmony. As we witness shifts in our natural environment, we are invited to reflect on the impact of our collective choices in order to achieve a deeper understanding of our place within a changing world.”

    “Blooming Wonders: A Celebration of Spring” at Artechouse (now through May 31)
    The Houston venue that acts as a greenhouse for art, science, and technology to grow together, Artechouse, brings back this hit exhibition from last year.To explore themes of growth, renewal, and sustainability, “Bloom wonders” showcases several dynamic installations, including “PIXELBLOOM: Timeless Butterflies,” a 270 degrees projection space that puts visitors in the middle of a butterfly cloud. Audiences journey with a flock of butterflies into an immense garden of flowers. In another immersive space, “BloomFall: Through the Infinite” guests enter an mirrored infinity room full of shifting floral dimensions. The installation, “Akousmaflore et Lux” creates a very different type of garden where plants transform into musical instruments. “Clay Pillar” invites visitors to sculpt new forms using clay and a little help from an AI program.

    “Ernesto Neto: SunForceOceanLife” at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (now-September 7)
    Immersive art gets elevated as the MFAH brings back this commissioned installation that had museum goers walking on air. Looking something like a giant starfish or spiral galaxy from underneath, Ernesto Neto’s singular work floats above almost the entirety of Cullinan Hall in the Caroline Wiess Law Building. One of the largest crochet works to date by Neto, the sculpture consists of yellow, orange, and green materials hand-woven into a myriad of patterns and sewn together in a spiral formation. Visitors can enter this rising labyrinth and wander through different sections filled with soft, plastic balls underfoot that move with each step. Once they reach the center of work, they might pause to view the piece from within the art and reflect on their own journey through “SunForceOceanLife.”

    “Ernesto Neto created this site-specific piece as a tribute to the life-giving forces of the sun and the ocean. Inspired by crochet, which he learned from his grandmother, the piece transforms this traditional Brazilian craft into a massive, enveloping structure that engages the body and the mind,” remark Mari Carmen Ramírez, Wortham Curator of Latin American Art on the return of the monumental installation.

    True North 2026 along Heights Boulevard (now through December)
    Once again, art grows on the Height Boulevard esplanade with this annual outdoor sculpture exhibition sponsored and partnered by the nonprofit Houston Heights Association. The outdoor show features the latest work of some stellar Texas and Houston artists, including Hans Molzberger, Suzette Mouchaty, James D. Phillips, Roger Colombik, Mark Nelson, Robbie Barber, Jim Robertson, Keith Crane/Damon Thomas. Since the artists don’t always install their sculptures on the same days, True North is always an artful excuse to make time for a walk along the boulevard to see what new work has popped up. This beloved tradition is once again thanks to an all-volunteer team, along with the Houston Heights Association in cooperation with the City of Houston Parks and Recreation and Public Works Departments and the Houston Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs.

    "Rebel Girl" and “The Vanguard” at Houston Center for Photography (March 12-April 12)
    Just a few days after International Women’s Day, HCP continues their historic commitment to championing women’s photographic careers as they present two exhibition exploring the complexities of female identity. “Rebel Girl” exhibits the work of Luisa Dörr, Selina Román, and Jo Ann Chaus, artists whose work challenges convention while questioning stereotypes and illuminating the evolving roles and perceptions of women today. For “The Vanguard,” HCP executive director, Anne Leighton Massoni, went through their archives and selected the work of 20 trailblazing women who exhibited at HCP within its first 20 years. Taken together their work illustrate the diversity of women’s artistic visions and creativity.

    “The Gift of Drawing: Cy Twombly” at the Menil Collection (March 27-August 9)
    Perhaps as a nod to the Menil Collection being the home of the only permanent retrospective exhibition of 20th century pioneering artist, Cy Twombly’s, work, last year the Cy Twombly Foundation made an extraordinary gift of 121 of Twombly’s drawings to the institute. Now art lovers around the world will get to see some of that landmark gift, as the Menil Drawing Institute presents this exhibition featuring 30 of those works. Covering three decades of the artist’s activity, from the 1950s to the 1980s, the show will feature work created by Twombly’s use of a broad range of materials, from graphite to oil paint; techniques such as drawing and collage; and themes that are fundamental to his entire practice, such as classical antiquity, eroticism, and nature. Some highlight of the exhibition will be a series of lush and unrestrained landscapes from 1986 that verge on pure abstraction; two untitled works from 1970 that are related to the artist’s “blackboard paintings” on view in Cy Twombly Gallery; and Narcissus, 1975, a collage of paper, with oil, charcoal, and wax crayon on paper. None of these works have been exhibited in the U.S. before.

    “Night Light” at Allen’s Landing at Buffalo Bayou Park (March 28)
    The annual free festival of video art along Buffalo Bayou moves west this year from its usual setting along the industrial and residential landscapes of the Buffalo Bayou East trails to Allen’s Landing in downtown Houston. The concrete bridges and underbellies of the major city freeways that emerge from watery bayou depths become the canvases for three site-specific installations from some of Houston most innovative video and multidisciplinary artists. Co-presented by the Aurora Picture Show and Buffalo Bayou Partnership “Night Light” puts the spotlight on new works from artist, designer, and engineer, Corey De’Juan Sherrard Jr.; video, installation, and performance artist and Rice professor, Kenneth Tam; and award winning collaborative duo Hillerbrand+Magsamen. And it wouldn’t be an outdoor Houston event of any kind without food, so expect a lively night artisan market hosted by East End District and BLCK Market at East River featuring local vendors and food trucks plus tunes from DJ Gracie Chavez.

    Bayou City Art Festival Downtown at Sam Houston Park (March 28-29)
    Downtown Houston continues to sprout art everywhere, as the last weekend in March also heralds the biannual Bayou City Art Fest in Sam Houston Park. Showcasing art from 250 creators from around the country, the festival always brings a wide selection of paintings, prints, jewelry, sculptures, and functional art at all price levels. Fest goers also have the opportunity to meet the art makers and hear the stories behind the art. This year’s featured artists is Lijah Hanley, a digital photographer from Vancouver, WA who first found his place behind a camera lens when he was 13. Along with a day of art, a ticket includes live music all day long on two stages, roaming performers, exciting kids areas with interactive crafts, and culinary arts demonstrations.

    Ernesto Neto, SunForceOceanLife (installation view), 2020, crocheted textile and\nplastic balls, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Museum purchase funded by the\nCaroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment Fund
    © 2020 Ernesto Neto / photograph by Albert Sanchez
    Ernesto Neto, SunForceOceanLife (installation view), 2020, crocheted textile and plastic balls, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Museum purchase funded by the Caroline Wiess Law Accessions Endowment Fund
    news/arts
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