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    Collaborations and Innovation

    Houston gets a new edgy arts festival based on a trendy Austin staple: Ready for CounterCurrent?

    Joel Luks
    Mar 6, 2014 | 6:30 pm

    If you've ever pondered what exactly the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts at the University of Houston — not to be confused with the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion in The Woodlands — is all about, a newly launched festival promises to decode the mysteries of an organization that lauds the importance of multidisciplinary collaborations.

    The Mitchell Center's inaugural CounterCurrent Festival is set to run from April 9 through 13 at diverse venues around the city. The festival, produced to be the cousin of Austin's Fusebox Festival (April 16-27), convenes the bulk of the Mitchell Center's programs into one, five-day artsy binge, an approach that simplifies how the center goes about its quest.

    The name was derived from a desire to convey the electric energy generated when ideas that collide are presented in a non-mainstream environment. Although CounterCurrent nods to the kind of renegade, forward-thinking personalities that often delve into multidisciplinary genres, festival producer and Mitchell Center executive director Karen Farber is aware that experimental art can be met with reservations from more traditional art consumers — not everyone is a risk taker.

    "Multidisciplinary art is a reflection of what our world is today, a hybrid of technologies, cultures and experiences that are constantly evolving."

    "In Houston, it seems that art is either very polished or very grass roots," Farber explains. "The CounterCurrent Festival acts as a bridge between those two polar opposite approaches to presenting art."

    In partnership with other avant garde presenters such as DiverseWorks, Aurora Picture Show and Project Row Houses, among others, Farber's intention is to inspire a spirit of adventure in audiences seeking to experience something that's an accurate representation of 21st century living.

    "Multidisciplinary art is a reflection of what our world is today, a hybrid of technologies, cultures and experiences that are constantly evolving," Farber says. "The dialogue that takes place when working across art genres is where innovation happens. The end result is typically something fresh, exciting and exalting."

    Adventurous Art Highlights

    Two installations are slated for the festival headquarters, located in the historic Bermac Arts Building in Midtown. Contrasting natural and unnatural elements, Chicago-based Steve Rowell's Uncanny Sensing (Texas Prototype) follows a series of regional investigations that gathers data from sensors and remote technology. The information is then is reinterpreted visually via time lapse. Composer Byron Au Yong and videographer Susie J. Lee collaborate in Piano Concerto - Houston, a multimedia work that layers sounds and footage of 11 local pianists.

    Choreographer Jonah Bokaer and visual artist Anthony McCall join forces for Eclipse (April 10-11, Quintero Theatre), a piece that incorporates movement, light, visual design and an audiovisual time score to render a play space that includes the audience. Eclipse, as the name fittingly implies, weaves light and movement.

    Think of Lacy Johnson and Josh Okun's [the invisible city] as one of those choose-your-own-adventure books. Using a smartphone or GPS-enabled device, participants will turn into fictional characters via an app that delivers clue after clue in a scavenger game. Players may be asked to run through tunnels, hop aboard buses and kayak down the bayou as they encounter fun trials and challenges, each designed to illustrate the role of community.

    Performance collective Lagartijas Tiradas al Sol's El Rumor del Incendio (April 12, MECA) confronts the rise of armed violence in Mexico during the second half of the 20th century. The company asks: "What motivates these men and women to take arms, abandoning comfort and the everyday inertia in pursuit of a transformation?"

    To the musically refined ear, Suzanne Bocanegra's Rerememberer (April 11, Eldorado Ballroom) sounds like a nightmare. Imagine an orchestra of 50 violinists who've been playing the fiddle for little more than one hour coming together in a performance? This sound experiment, helmed by violinist/conductor Todd Reynolds, was created from textiles. Rerememberer transcribes the process of weaving into musical notation.

    Wu Tsang's Moved by the Motion featuring boychild (April 12, DiverseWorks) is the performance art piece that's part of the artist's exhibition at DiverseWorks. Set in a futuristic backdrop in which digital avatars and online profiles come alive to control an intricate surveillance network, Tsang's performance follows an emerging celebrity performer as the headliner deals with an alternate reality.

    Somewhere in between pseudo scientific ideas and poetic surrealism is Miwa Matreyek's This World Made Itself and Myth and Infrastructure (April 9, Aurora Picture Show), a fusion of projected animation and theatrical shadow silhouettes that tells the history of the earth. Organizers describe Matreyek's style as if one were "flipping through a children's encyclopedia."
    ___

    Admission to CounterCurrent Festival events is free with a season's pass. Online reservations are encouraged as many of the performance spaces have limited seating capacity.

    Suzanne Bocanegra's Rerememberer gathers 50 violinists who've been playing the fiddle for little more than one hour.

    unspecified
    news/arts

    And the Winner Is

    Houston's Alley Theatre only Texas winner of prestigious new play award

    Lindsey Wilson
    Dec 5, 2025 | 11:31 am
    Audience at Alley Theatre
    Photo courtesy of Alley Theatre
    Bring a friend to the theater for free.

    The Tony Award-winning Alley Theatre has once again earned national recognition, becoming the only Texas theater selected for a 2025 Edgerton Foundation New Play Award, a prestigious honor known for helping launch some of the most influential plays and musicals of the past two decades.

    The award will support the Alley’s May 2026 world premiere of Dear Alien by Liz Duffy Adams, giving the production additional rehearsal time that has proven essential for shaping new work.

    The Edgerton Awards have a powerful legacy behind them. Past recipients include phenomenon-level titles such as Hamilton, Dear Evan Hansen, The Prom, Next to Normal, and Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike — shows that went on to win Tony Awards, earn Pulitzer Prizes, and define contemporary American theater.

    “I’m so grateful to the Edgerton Foundation for their support of Liz Duffy Adams’ play Dear Alien," says Alley artistic director Rob Melrose in a release. "Getting an additional week of rehearsal on a new play makes a tremendous difference. In Dear Alien, the titular role (played by resident acting company member Dylan Godwin) is onstage the entire show, and it is going to be quite a challenge. Supporting new plays is incredibly important for the health of the American theater. Four years ago, Alley Theatre premiered Liz’s play Born with Teeth, and it is currently having a run on the West End after gracing the stages of major theaters in the U.S. such as the Guthrie, Asolo Rep, and Oregon Shakespeare Festival."

    Alley Theatre has a significant history with developing new work. In 1996, the Alley won the Regional Theatre Tony Award after debuting the world premiere of the musical Jekyll & Hyde, which went on to tour 40 cities and play for two years on Broadway (it lives on thanks to a DVD and VHS recording starring David Hasselhoff in the title roles).

    In 1998, the Alley staged the American premiere of a rediscovered Tennessee Williams play, Not About Nightingales, which later enjoyed a successful Broadway run.

    The Edgerton Foundation New Plays Program, directed by Brad and Louise Edgerton, was piloted in 2006 with Center Theatre Group in Los Angeles by offering two musicals in development an extended rehearsal period for the entire creative team, including the playwrights. The Edgertons launched the program nationally in 2007 and have supported 569 plays to date at over 50 different theaters across the country. Over the last 19 years, the Edgerton Foundation has awarded $19,670,534 to 569 productions.

    Among the 2025 winners are pop-country star Jennifer Nettles' new musical Giulia: The Poison Queen of Palermo at Perelman Performing Arts Center in New York City; Claudia Shear's The Recipe, about the early life of Julia Child, at La Jolla Playhouse in California; and prolific playwright David Lindsay-Abaire's latest title, The Balusters, at Manhattan Theatre Club. See the complete list here.

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