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    best april art

    9 vivid and eye-catching April events and openings no Houston art fan should miss

    Tarra Gaines
    Apr 13, 2023 | 1:16 pm

    Time to get revved up, Houston: we’ve got a zooming month of art ahead.

    From nature-inspired wilderness sculptures to a pioneering graphic novel, to museum basketball to photography taken with youthful eyes, April brings art in a multitude of unique and innovative forms.

    Fasten those seat belts and hit the road for art everywhere — including the streets themselves, as the world’s greatest Art Car Parade rolls into town once more.

    “CAMH Court” at Contemporary Arts Museum (now through April 27)

    Houston-based artist Trenton Doyle Hancock makes basketball into (even more) visual art with this interactive installation presented by a slam-dunk of a partnership between CAMH and adidas Basketball.

    Billed as the first-ever playable basketball court in an art museum, CAMH COURT conforms to the signature dimensions of CAMH’s Brown Foundation Gallery through canting a regulation-size court into a parallelogram. Emerging from Hancock’s hyper-imagination, the court is an immersive and uniquely spirited environment where players might dunk from the three-point line or lose themselves in the embrace of Hancock’s striped Bringback characters, which swarm from baseline to baseline.

    In addition to the custom court, Hancock has designed the backboards and basketballs, extending the cast of characters that populate his fantastical world into new dimensions.

    “Ada Trillo & the Sirkhane: Darkroom” at Houston Center for Photography (now through June 4)

    These two, parallel solo exhibitions put at the forefront the migration and immigration experience of family and children in geographic distant border countries: United States-Mexico-Central America and the Middle East.

    First-generation, Mexican-American photographer Trillo shares a series of photographs that make visible the migrant caravans traveling through Honduras, Guatemala, and Mexico since 2020.

    Self-taught Syrian-born photograph Serbest Salih and founder of Sirkhane Darkroom, non-profit mobile darkroom and photo lab dedicated to underprivileged children from Syria, Turkey, and Iraq, exhibits some of Darkroom students’ analog photographs.

    "Ripple Effect” at Retrospect Coffee Bar (April 14)

    Art Car Parade
      
    Photo by Morris Malakoff
    The parade will feature more than 250 art cars.

    This collective exhibition organized by local artist Anna Hazel will benefit the Buffalo Bayou Partnership. Works inspired by Buffalo Bayou from over 25 artists will be on display for one night only, and a percentage of sales from every piece sold will support BBP and their mission to create and steward welcoming parks, trails, and unique spaces along the city’s most significant natural waterway.

    Art Car Parade Weekend at various locations throughout Houston (April 13-16)

    As we note in our breakdown of events, the weekend keeps it artfully weird with the Main Street Drag April 13, designed to bring the parade to those people who might not be able to attend the parade, with artists bringing their Art Car Art Cars to schools, hospitals, nursing homes, developmental facilities and other locations.

    Friday brings the ultimate art party, the Legendary Art Car Ball at the Orange Show World Headquarters. Appropriately, Marilyn Oshman, Founder of the Orange Show Center for Visionary Art, will be this year’s grand marshal.

    On Saturday the 36th Annual Houston Art Car Parade brings us our full day of rolling folk art with every kind of animal, vegetable, mineral and political statement made artfully manifest in car form.

    Finally, cheer on your favorites at the Awards Ceremony on Sunday back at the Orange Show.

    “Eye on Houston: High School Documentary Photography” at Museum of Fine Arts (April 19-Spring 2024)

    Each spring, we get a peek at tomorrow’s artists today with this annual exhibition of student photography from area high schools that celebrates Houston’s diverse neighborhoods from the perspective of these budding artists who live here.

    In this 28th year, the exhibition features images by students representing eight high schools: Bellaire, Carnegie Vanguard, DeBakey, Eastwood Academy, Furr, Westbury, Westside, and Jack Yates.

    The students documented daily life in their respective communities, capturing moments that reflect their sense of self, their future, and their imminent transition into adulthood.

    “Hyperreal: Gray Foy” at Menil Drawing Institute (April 21-September 3)

    Enter the surrealistic and sometimes magical world of Gray Foy’s imaginative artwork in this first solo museum exhibition of the midcentury American, Dallas-born artist.

    Spanning the artist’s career from the 1940s to the 1970s, the exhibition traces Foy’s early Surrealism influences, which he described as “hyper-realism,” to his later inspiration in nature’s transitional and transformative states, culminating in works were he explored botanical and ecological subjects.

    The exhibition also celebrates two recent gifts of nearly 80 drawings to the Menil, a selection of which will be on display.

    “Gray Foy’s unusual talent caught the eye of some of the savviest drawings connoisseurs of the mid-20th century, but because Foy stopped working mid-career, he is not well remembered today. This exhibition is selected from recent gifts to the Menil Collection, now an important repository of Foy’s drawings,” describes Menil director, Rebecca Rabinow.

    “Si Lewen: The Parade” at Menil Drawing Institute (April 21-September 3)

    In a first for the U.S., the MDI brings together all 55 original drawings that the ground-breaking Polish-born American artist created for graphic novel, The Parade, about the never-ending cycle of war.

    The Parade speaks to cycles of war, the seductive glory and pomp, followed by soldier enlistment, community deprivation, devastating destruction, death, and heartbreak.

    Of the monumental work, MDI assistant curator Kelly Montana describes, “Si Lewen: The Parade evokes the destruction and despair surrounding World War II in Europe as authoritarian violence built and lives were lost. Inspired by the traditions of visual narrative by artists like Frans Masereel, Lewen created a deeply affecting set of works that carry a message as potent today as it was in the 1950s when the book was published.”

    “A Gift from the Bower” at Locke Surls Center for Art and Nature (April 22-23)

    Yes, we have to get outside the Loop — multiple loops — for this art in nature exhibition at Splendora Gardens in Cleveland, Texas. But with a partnership between DiverseWorks and the Locke Surls Center for Art and Nature (LSCAN), we expect it worth the drive.

    Originally conceived by artists James Surls and Charmaine Locke, this outdoor, multidisciplinary art exhibition lies within natural galleries formed by small clearings in the woods of Southeast Texas.

    The project is co-curated by Jack Massing and Xandra Eden to include newly commissioned works by fourteen artists and artist teams. The flora and fauna of the grounds of LSCAN take a central role in a number of the artists’ works, while others focus on community, the environment, and our relationships to nature and land.

    Look for art from renowned and up and coming artists including Leticia R. Bajuyo, Susan Budge and George Tobolowsky, John Calaway, Carlos Canul and Rachel Gardner, Lina Dib, Alton DuLaney, Ronald L. Jones, Sharon Kopriva, Charmaine Locke, Jack Massing, Sherry Owens and Art Shirer, Patrick Renner, Kaneem Smith, and James Surls.

    “Evita Tezeno: Out of Many” at Houston Museum of African American Culture (April 27-June 17)

    This new exhibition by the Texas-born collage artist showcases her technique that combines painting and collage.

    Tezeno’s tapestry-like works are carefully constructed from a variety of materials she brings together to depict everyday scenes from Black Life in America. Turning the phrase “Out of Many, One” and its Latin form E Pluribus Unum, which articulates the ideals of America’s Founding Fathers, the exhibition “Out of Many” aspire to those ideals, representing, with fondness, the days in the lives of everyday Black Americans.

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    Best June Theater

    Cabarets and festivals take the spotlight in Houston's 8 best shows in June

    Tarra Gaines
    Jun 3, 2025 | 12:30 pm
    The Catastrophic Theatre presents Another Ding-Dang Tamarie Show
    Photo courtesy of The Catastrophic Theatre
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    We get a bit of a theatrical breather this month before some of the biggest mysteries, comedies, and musicals of the year arrive in July. But June still brings plenty of new shows for theater and dance lovers as we leap into summer.

    It seems like the entire Houston performing arts community will participate in the Fade to Black Art Festival. Meanwhile, Ensemble gets tapping, the Houston Ballet soars, and musical cabaret fills some of our most intimate venues. And as is Houston tradition, we officially ring in summer with the debut of the latest wild and outrageous show from Catastrophic Theatre’s Tamarie Cooper.

    Summer Cabaret from Paul Hope Cabarets and Music Box Theater
    Let’s face it, summer is the perfect time in Houston to head inside for evenings of cool cabaret. Paul Hope Cabarets gets cosmic with Ultra Lounge: Space Capades (now through June 16). The show will feature favorite celestial pop hits of the '50s and ‘60s, all with a space theme, including "Fly Me to the Moon," "Up Up and Away," and "Polka Dots and Moonbeams," as well as a little Burt Bacharach and Michelle Legrand. Over at Music Box Theater’s home inside Queensbury Theatre, they’ll celebrate Number One Hits (now through June 28) with an original show featuring Billboard chart toppers from the late 1950s to today. Look for every style of music, including the The Mamas & The Papas, the Eagles, Elton John, and Lady Gaga.

    Fade to Black Arts Festival presented at venues across the Theater District and Midtown (June 8-14)
    The annual festival showcases the diverse works of African-American performances in film, music, poetry, and theatre with a special mission to uplift local Black artists. The festival offers classes, talks, and workshops for artists, performers, and even theatrical designers. Screen star Phylicia Rashad will offer an acting masterclass.

    But the week will also present a treasure of shows and productions for audiences. Along with dance, poetry, film, and music performances, theater lovers will find short play productions, as well as readings of new scripts from up-and-coming playwrights, as well as contemporary classics works from award-winning playwrights. Some of these readings at the Alley, Ensemble, MATCH and Stages will be free.

    Sparrow: A Triple Bill from Houston Ballet (June 12-22)
    Houston Ballet takes flight for their final production of the season with three shorter works from masterful choreographers, including one from HB artistic director Stanton Welch. The evening features a classic from ballet great George Balanchine. Theme and Variations is ballet at its most intricate and refined, set to the final movement of Tchaikovsky’s Suite No. 3 in G major. Also on the program is Four Last Songs, a work not seen on the Wortham stage since 2007. Houston Ballet artistic director emeritus Ben Stevenson created this audience favorite as a deeply emotional reflection on the journey of life and the inevitability of letting go.

    The title work of the performance, Sparrow, comes from Welch, and it celebrates 60s culture using the iconic music of Simon & Garfunkel. Sparrow is a rare bird, indeed, a male-centered ballet spotlighting 19 men and five women. Look for humor and nostalgic charm along with Welch’s usual bold and athletic contemporary choreography.

    A Voice Within from Houston Grand Opera (June 17)
    In collaboration with the Emancipation Park Conservancy and the African American History Research Center at the Gregory School, HGO debuts another world premiere operatic piece with this new song cycle by HGO Composer-in-Residence Joel Thompson and librettist and Houston poet laureate emeritus Deborah D.E.E.P. Mouton. Comprised of 12 songs, A Voice Within tells the often unsung stories of Black Houstonians, providing a platform for voices that sometimes have been marginalized in the classical music world. The poems are based on interviews with longtime city residents, as well as oral histories from the collections of the Emancipation Park Conservancy and Gregory School. Appropriately, the song cycle will debut at the Emancipation Park Conservancy in the Third Ward.

    An Evening With Broadway’s DeQuina Moore at the Hobby Center (June 20-21)
    Keeping with the many cabaret shows this month, the Hobby Center’s intimate Founders Club welcomes native Houstonian and Broadway star DeQuina Moore for an evening of some of her favorite songs as well as stories from her musical and stage career. While Moore has made film and Broadway waves and starred in national tours, she’s also become a local favorite at Stages, playing local ballerina legend Lauren Anderson in the world premiere play Plumsuga and the great Billie Holiday in Lady Day at Emerson's Bar & Grill. Now hear her own stories and glorious voice at the Hobby Center.

    New Work Festival presented by Thunderclap Productions (June 21)
    Thunderclap has produced several innovative plays and world premieres in recent years, but usually only one or two productions a season. Before offering another world premiere musical in August, they’re giving Houston theater lovers a chance to glimpse a multitude of new and evolving work from local playwrights, lyricists, and composers in this festival, including: Aaron Alon, Alric Davis, Lizzie Guest, Eric C. Jones, and Neil Ellis Orts.

    The Tap Dance Kid at Ensemble Theatre (June 27-July 27)
    This feel-good musical was a Broadway and touring hit in the early 1980s and should make for rousing, fun production for Ensemble to end their season on. Father, William, and son, Willie, clash over ambitions, as the strict William wants his son to follow in his footsteps to become a lawyer. But the dance-loving Willie wants to walk, or in this case tap, down his own road after spending time with his maternal uncle, Dipsey Bates. Willie’s uncle and mother were dancing vaudeville stars as kids, and now the he feels the call to dance. Will music and dance tear the family apart or bring it together?

    Another Ding-Dang Tamarie Show! from Catastrophic Theatre (June 27-August 2)
    The theater queen of Houston summers returns with another brand new show that’s once again timely, personal, comic, musical, and most of all sly fun. And to break even more fourth walls, we hear this Ding-Dang will be a tell-all, meta revue about the making of her annual summer shows. Tamarie dishes and spills all the backstage tea, sharing all her secrets about how the tap-dancing sausage (sometimes literally) gets made. Journey through her creative process as she wrestles with writer’s block, a sexy candy man, A.I. robots, flatulent bumblebees, and other distractions. Plus we await our most favorite summertime reveal, seeing which Catastrophic regular performer gets the weirdest and wackiest costume this year.

    The Catastrophic Theatre presents Another Ding-Dang Tamarie Show
      
    Photo courtesy of The Catastrophic Theatre

    Catastrophic Theatre presents Another Ding-Dang Tamarie Show.

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