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    Calendar Closeup

    Your weekly guide to Houston: Five (plus) don't-miss events — pure yoga madness included

    Joel Luks
    Jan 31, 2014 | 7:12 am

    January is just about over and done with. And hopefully so are any mentions of the biatch of a polar vortex.

    Warm yourself up with this week's suggestions, which include a bendy gathering, an operatic character who can't control his libido, important classical music guests, a cutting-edge dance troupe and a film that shocks with its premise.

    Fifth Annual Texas Yoga Conference

    I know you are out there. Are you one of those folks who have been itching to try practicing yoga? With so many different approaches to the physical, mental and spiritual discipline, embarking on the yoga path may be intimidating.

    If that's you, get your asana over to the Texas Yoga Conference, where more than 80 presentations, lectures and classes lay it all out on the mat. With the addition of concerts and vendors showcasing all sorts of yoga goods, think of this three-day affair as part education, part happy party. So go ahead, strike a pose. Find a complete schedule here.

    The skinny: Friday through Sunday; Silver Street Studios; entry starts at $10.

    Opera in the Heights presents Don Giovanni

    The scene in which the ghost of the Commandatore comes back from the beyond to scare the bejesus out of Don is one of my favorite in the operatic repertoire. Although the story of the suave Casanova — read that: male whore — begins with tragedy, the plot moves quickly to humorous escapades as Mr. G tries to penetrate anything with a hole. His mission? To add to his little black book of some 1,500 randy conquests. Lesson learned? Justice prevails.

    The intimate setting of Opera in Heights does much to seduce audiences into the music. As for the company's interpretation, you'll find a contemporary setting that's a melange of mobster Bond, Grease Lightening and surrealist fun in with the unforgettable womanizer goes about his promiscuous escapades. And you thought Mozart was boring.

    The skinny: Friday through Feb. 9; Opera in the Heights at Lambert Hall; tickets start at $32.

    Houston Symphony presents "Adams Conducts Adams"

    It's not often that classical music lovers are offered the opportunity to experience a composer conduct his own oeuvres. While it's true that most symphony orchestras program mostly scores by dead tunesmiths, the Houston Symphony welcomes iconic American composer John Adams for a concert that includes his City Noir.

    Joining Adams is the charming fiddler Gil Shaham, whose recording of Korngold's Violin Concerto is terrific. You'll hear that and Copland's El Salon Mexico.

    The skinny: Friday through Sunday; Jones Hall; tickets start at $25.

    Society for the Performing Arts presents the Mark Morris Dance Group

    While many contemporary dance companies rely on recorded music to accompany the onstage action, the Brooklyn-based Mark Morris Dance Group prides itself in collaborating with live musicians for each performance. At the hands of its founder, one of the most important dance makers working today, the troupe of movers and shakers is a sparkling example of artists who possess the prowess to enthrall audiences of all backgrounds.

    The skinny: Friday and Saturday, 8 p.m.; Wortham Theater Center; tickets start at $23.

    Film screening: The Act of Killing

    It's the type of premise that compels you to stop midstep and consider what size cojones director Joshua Oppenheimer must have for producing this chilling documentary. Oppenheimer persuaded Anwar Congo, the chief of a brutal death squad that's responsible for the murder of some thousand people in Indonesia in the 1960s, to gather his partners in crime to re-enact his vicious killings — on camera. But what happens when Anwar is asked to play the role of a victim?

    The film weaves in an out of the recreations to behind the scenes footage of these makeshift actors as they respond to the situations in a way that confronts the participants' principles.

    The skinny: Playing selected days between Saturday and Feb. 6 at 14 Pews; tickets are $10, free for 14 Pews members.

    A scene from The Act of Killing.

    Art of Killing film
    Courtesy photo
    A scene from The Act of Killing.
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    MFAH expands

    Houston museum acquires historic Masonic lodge property for new greenspace

    Eric Sandler
    Dec 23, 2025 | 2:16 pm
    Holland Lodge masonic building
    Holland Lodge No. 1, A.F. & A.M./Facebook
    The building at 4911 will be torn down for the new greenspace.

    The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston has acquired a prime parcel to expand its campus in the Museum District. On Tuesday, December 23, the museum announced it has purchased a two-acre parcel of land at 4911 Montrose Blvd that will bring its total footprint to 16 acres.

    Located just north of the Glassel School of Art, the property will be developed as a greenspace that will serve as a community lawn as well as be utilized for future museum events and parking. MFAH has retained landscape architects Nelson Byrd Woltz — the firm responsible for work at Memorial Park and the recently-opened Ismaili Center — to create the design for the new greenspace.

    Museum of Fine Arts, Houston greenspace rendering A rendering offers a bird's-eye preview of the new greenspace.Image by by Cong Nie/Courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    At this time, the museum does not have plans to build anything on the property, according to a press release.

    To make way for the greenspace, the property’s existing building, Holland Lodge No. 1, will be torn down. Built in 1954 as a home for the oldest Masonic lodge chapter in Texas, the building features a sandstone mural facade. It has been for sale since at least 2005, according to a report in the Houston Chronicle.

    Demolition on the site is expected to begin in spring 2026 with the greenspace opening in approximately two years, according to press materials. In addition to the Glassell School, the museum’s campus includes the Audrey Jones Beck Building, the Caroline Wiess Law Building, the Lillie and Hugh Roy Cullen Sculpture Garden, and the Nancy and Rich Kinder Building.

    “We are delighted to contribute to Houston’s greenspace access with this new initiative, which will expand the museum’s 14-acre campus to a thoroughly walkable 16 acres,” Gary Tinterow, director and Margaret Alkek Williams chair of the MFAH, said in a statement. “While the primary objective for the purchase of this property is to secure land for any potential future expansion of the museum, our priority now is to create a welcoming community lawn. Thoughtfully designed by Nelson Byrd Woltz, one of the leading firms in sustainable landscape practice, the site will serve as public greenspace and provide additional parking for museum visitors.”

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