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    Art Secrets & Tips

    Art secrets: This cheat sheet to MFAH's new blockbuster Impressionism exhibit will make you seem brilliant

    Tarra Gaines
    Dec 25, 2013 | 2:27 pm

    As much as we love our families, concentrated time in enclosed spaces with them during the holidays can create stress. After the turkey has been devoured, the presents opened and the game watched, comes that moment when we look across the room at these beloved ones connected to us by DNA and marriage certificates and realize: Oh God, we’re going to have to figure out something to entertain all these people for the next few day before someone brings up health care or Duck Dynasty.

    This year, a possible answer for the annual holiday-family-time-dilemma comes from an unlikely source, the Museum of Fine Arts, who has one solution for us all, Impressionism, or more specifically The Age of Impressionism: Great French Paintings from the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute.

    There’s a simple reason the MFAH frequently brings Impressionism exhibitions to town. Everyone loves these guys. Granddad loves Monet, your mom digs Cassatt. Your conservative uncle who thinks real art died at the dawn of the 20th century, he knows what he likes and he likes Renoir. Your vegan, hipster cousin who likes Degas, but only ironically, deep in his heart he adores those ballet dancers.

    These individual paintings can evoke a visceral, emotional response.

    I’m making light of Impressionism’s importance to art history — while also making a truly horrible pun — only because I think it’s the light that draws us to these works. As much as we know we’re required to exit through the gift shop, we can’t seem to view these paintings through our 21st century cynical lens. The vibrancy of the light and colors pull us in and for a few minutes calms our collective ADD.

    These individual paintings can evoke a visceral, emotional response. (For example, Monet’s The Cliffs at Étretat makes me want to spread out a beach blanket and bask underneath it.) But The Age of Impressionism taken as a whole will also bring viewers a new understanding of 19th century French art, as the exhibition juxtaposes the different movements and styles of the period.

    While the Impressionist mega stars are included in the exhibition, with galleries devoted to Renoir, Degas and Monet, it also widens the focus to their predecessors like Daumier, Corot and Rousseau, as well as some examples of their arch nemeses (if the Impressionists were superheroes) academic painters.

    After attending an early walkthrough of the exhibition that included a fascinated Impressionism tutorial given by Richard Rand, senior curator at the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute and Helga Kessler Aurisch, MFAH curator of European art, I’ve prepared some tips and tidbits to wrangle your family, friends, and dates through the exhibition while proving your Impressionism quaint-cobblestone street cred.

    Light Calls for Light

    Though a Thursday evening walk among the painted French countryside might make for the perfect date night, take family and friends during the day. The natural light in the Beck Building’s third floor galleries is the perfect illumination for these paintings, many of which were painted outdoors.

    Naked Ladies Clashing

    As you enter the exhibition, point out William-Adolphe Bouguereau’s, Seated Nude. She’s hard to miss. Keep her in mind until you find Renoir’s Blonde Bather near the end of the exhibition. Explain to your entourage that with these two paintings, produced only a few years apart, we can see the difference between the traditional academic painters and the more avant-garde Impressionists.

    Suck it Royal Academy of Arts, London and you too Kimbell Art Museum, Fort Worth

    The Age of Impressionism has been galavanting around the world for two years, with Houston its last stop before heading back home to The Clark Art Institute, but make sure your out-of-town guests know there are a few pieces only we are seeing.

    Jean-Léon Gérôme’s Tiger on the Watch has been a hometown favorite since the MFAH acquired it in 1921, and it stays here. Houston is also only one of two museums on the tour that include what is likely to be the favorite piece of grandma and your tween niece, Degas’s Little Dancer Aged Fourteen.

    Eternal Debates

    Don’t be ashamed to get into a heated argument with your teen cousins about who’s hotter Renoir or Degas. Two small self-portraits, one of a young Degas (the dreamy dreamer) in his early twenties and the other of a youngish Renoir (the intense bad boy), will fuel this most pressing of aesthetic disputes into dinnertime.

    Altered Tales

    For two examples of how a painting’s story can change with a layer of paint, look to Renoir’s A Box at the Theater (At the Concert) and Sleeping Girl. X-rays show that the drapery behind the two women waiting for the music to begin in Box at the Theater covers the figure of a man that Renoir erased from the work. Also, the lovely, seemingly innocent Sleeping Girl once had a wine bottle (presumably empty) at her feet. Use this knowledge to begin a discussion on story composition in visual art or to convince your 7-year-old nephew you have x-ray vision.

    Be Warned

    No matter what you do with the rest of your life, know this: As you wandered through the very first gallery, Carolus-Duran’s gardener judged you and found you wanting.

    The Age of Impressionism: Great French Paintings from the Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute is on display at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston through March 23, 2014. The exhibition is specially ticketed, but does not require a timed reservation.

    William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Seated Nude, 1884, oil on canvas, Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Mass.

    MFAH The Age of Impressionism December 2013 Bouguereau - Seated Nude
    Photo courtesy of © The Clark
    William-Adolphe Bouguereau, Seated Nude, 1884, oil on canvas, Sterling and Francine Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, Mass.
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    Rapper J. Cole's globe-trotting Fall-Off Tour drops into Houston

    Alex Bentley
    Feb 16, 2026 | 1:00 pm
    J. Cole
    Photo by David Peters
    Rapper J. Cole will come to American Airlines Center in Dallas on September 19, 2026.

    Rapper and record producer J. Cole will set off on the globe-spanning The Fall-Off Tour in 2026, a journey that will include a stop at the Toyota Center in Houston on Wednesday, September 16.

    The tour will start with a 32-city leg in the U.S. and Canada, kicking off in Charlotte, North Carolina on July 11.

    A four-city Texas run will come toward the end of the leg, including San Antonio on September 13, Austin on September 14, and Dallas on September 19.

    Following the North American leg, he will travel to Europe, the UK, Australia, and New Zealand for 22 additional dates, taking the tour through mid-December.

    The tour is in support of J. Cole's just-released new album, The Fall-Off, his first new album in five years.

    Each of the rapper's previous six albums — dating back to his 2011 debut album, Cole World: The Sideline Story — have gone to No. 1 on the overall Billboard 200 chart.

    This is also J. Cole’s first solo headline tour in five years, and his first full global run since the 2017 4 Your Eyez Only World Tour.

    Tickets for all North American dates will be available starting on Tuesday, February 17 at 11 am via an artist presale. Fans can sign up for the presale at thefalloff.com/tour.

    Additional presales will run throughout the week ahead of the general on-sale beginning on Friday, February 20 at 11 am at thefalloff.com.

    J. COLE 2026 ‘THE FALL-OFF TOUR’ DATES

    • Sat Jul 11 — Charlotte, NC — Spectrum Center
    • Tue Jul 14 — Miami, FL — Kaseya Center
    • Wed Jul 15 — Tampa, FL — Benchmark International Arena
    • Fri Jul 17 — Atlanta, GA — State Farm Arena
    • Mon Jul 20 — Philadelphia, PA — Xfinity Mobile Arena
    • Thu Jul 23 — Baltimore, MD — CFG Bank Arena
    • Sat Jul 25 — Montreal, QC — Bell Centre
    • Mon Jul 27 — Toronto, ON — Scotiabank Arena
    • Fri Jul 31 — Brooklyn, NY — Barclays Center
    • Tue Aug 04 — New York, NY — Madison Square Garden
    • Wed Aug 05 — Queens, NY — UBS Arena
    • Fri Aug 07 — Boston, MA — TD Garden
    • Tue Aug 11 — Chicago, IL — United Center
    • Sat Aug 15 — Cleveland, OH — Rocket Arena
    • Sun Aug 16 — Detroit, MI — Little Caesars Arena
    • Tue Aug 18 — Minneapolis, MN — Target Center
    • Wed Aug 19 — Kansas City, MO — T-Mobile Center
    • Fri Aug 21 — Denver, CO — Ball Arena
    • Mon Aug 24 — Vancouver, BC — Rogers Arena
    • Tue Aug 25 — Seattle, WA — Climate Pledge Arena
    • Thu Aug 27 — Sacramento, CA — Golden 1 Center
    • Sat Aug 29 — Oakland, CA — Oakland Arena
    • Tue Sep 01 — Los Angeles, CA — Crypto.com Arena
    • Thu Sep 03 — Inglewood, CA — Intuit Dome
    • Sun Sep 06 — Las Vegas, NV — T-Mobile Arena
    • Wed Sep 09 — San Diego, CA — Viejas Arena
    • Thu Sep 10 — Phoenix, AZ — Mortgage Matchup Center
    • Sun Sep 13 — San Antonio, TX — Frost Bank Center
    • Mon Sep 14 — Austin, TX — Moody Center
    • Wed Sep 16 — Houston, TX — Toyota Center
    • Sat Sep 19 — Dallas, TX — American Airlines Center
    • Wed Sep 23 — Fayetteville, NC — Crown Coliseum
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