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    Immersive Art in the Heights

    New art venue lights up the Heights with immersive technology

    Tarra Gaines
    Jun 26, 2024 | 10:30 am

    When art and technology meet, they’ll find a dazzling new find a home at Artechouse, the 26,000-square-foot exhibition space that just landed in Houston. The name gives many clues to the concept that's both a production studio that brings art and technology together to create digital experimental exhibitions and a high tech venue to show these groundbreaking artworks that simply can’t be hung on a traditional gallery wall.

    During a preview of the space, co-founder and chief creative officer Sandro Kereselidze tell CultureMap he believes one of the latest and perhaps greatest tools for the 21st century artist is technology. While this Houston Artechouse isn’t the first of its kind — it joins the Washington D.C, New York City and Miami venues — it is the biggest, according to Kereselidze and can support multiple exhibitions at the same time.

    For their inaugural presentation, Artechouse unveils three distinct exhibitions into one show they're calling "Time and Space," as each one explores in its own unique way one of the most integral inspirations of artists throughout time, light.

    Kereselidze explains that when we view the exhibitions together, they do tell a story.

    “The story is of our relationship with light. Sometimes we don’t appreciate the light, but without light, life doesn’t exist. We would not be able to survive,” he says.

    "Beyond the Light"
      

    Photo by Tarra Gaines

    “Beyond the Light” uses some of the latest images from the James Webb Space and Hubble Space Telescopes to take visitors on an interstellar journey.

    And while in the past artists took up paintbrushes to try to capture light, contemporary artists can use images of galactic nurseries nurturing new born stars or even a programmed array of lasers to explore the many dimensions of light.

    “It’s exciting when we’re using the latest technology to tell that story,” Kereselidze says.

    Once entering the exhibition space, the first immersive art piece visitors will encounter is “Eternal Life.” Designed by Artechouse Studio, the installation was originally commissioned by the Nobel Prize Museum in Stockholm and makes its U.S debut in Houston. Inspired by T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets and touching on Nobel Prize winning discoveries from gene-editing technology to the physics of cosmic orbits, the audio-visual work screened on a large, circular, overhead canvas draws viewers into an abstract realm that feels like it holds the patterns of creation.

    The second and largest of the exhibitions is “Beyond the Light,” another Artechouse Studio creation that was made in collaboration with NASA. Here, the designers and artists translate real NASA data and technology into multimedia exhibits and installations. For example, 20 years of data on global chlorophyll concentration (a.k.a the stuff of plant photosynthesis) becomes OLED screens of swirling leaf-like patterns. Nearby in the same gallery, a dynamic hanging LED light sculpture represents the balance between light and gravity in the cosmos.

    The centerpiece of “Beyond the Light" is an immersive cinematic room of the same name that takes travelers on a journey through space-time, beginning with the latest images from the James Webb Space and Hubble Space Telescopes and diving into the vastness of human imagination.

    The third exhibition, “Intangible Forms” is a survey of work from award-winning Japanese multimedia artist Shohei Fujimoto. Using choreographed lasers, strobes and moving lights, Fujimoto seems to have discovered ways to sculpt light itself into tangible shapes and objects. Fujimoto’s artworks play with our understanding of solid matter, light, the real and illusionary.

    Kereselidze describes“Intangible Forms” as a kind of performance of lasers. “It’s a beautiful experience of seeing how an artist uses light to create these types of forms. The intangible becomes tangible in a sense.”

    While all three exhibitions use the latest tools in sensory and especially visually technology to create kinetic art pieces and sometimes even installations filled with wild motion, they also paradoxically invite viewers to slow down and contemplate. The floor of the “Eternal Life” space is littered with comfortable beanbag chairs to hold the body as the video takes the mind on a journey. Visitors are also encouraged to sit on the floor or on a viewing platform to watch the 26 minutes immersive “Beyond the Light” cinematic piece. And the large room housing Fujimoto’s monumental laser installation “Intangible #Array,” provides long benches for us to sit and experience the work almost as a meditation on light and darkness.

    While Kereselidze wasn’t prepared to give a timeframe on how long the three exhibitions will be in place, he explains that Artechouse Houston will host many shows in this new Houston home.

    “Artechouse is a space where we dynamically change exhibits all the time,” he asserts and adds that they already have many plans for future shows to bring to Houston.

    “As we speak we’re creating another 12 exhibits that we’re going to bring here. That’s what makes me excited that now we have another home to bring these exhibits to the public. When we create them, it’s sad when it’s not seen. This something like a print or a painting that be hung just on a wall. It has to be put together as a show.”

    And as these shows go on they will continue to take art into a technological future.

    “It’s a new medium. That’s what Artechouse is. We try to inspire the next generation. We try to empower the artists and educate the public.”

    ----

    Artechouse is located in the Heights at 600 W. 6th Street. For tickets and more information, visit the Artechouse website.

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    A Roman Holiday (Season)

    All roads lead to Houston museum's blockbuster exhibit of Imperial Rome

    Tarra Gaines
    Jun 11, 2025 | 3:15 pm
    ​The Museum of Fine Arts Houston presents "Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times"
    Photo courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
    The Museum of Fine Arts Houston presents "Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times" ("Statue of Trajan" Minturno, Italy, 2nd century, marble, National Archaeological Museum, Naples)

    Houston's holiday season will have a distinctly Roman feeling this year, as the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston is bringing the glory of the Gladiator era to Texas. On November 2, 2025 through January 25, 2026 the MFAH presents the monumental new exhibition “Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times.”

    Featuring 160 objects of antiquity, including marble sculptures, frescoes, mosaics, delicate glass vessels, and exquisite bronze artifacts, the exhibition will transport visitors back in time to the Roman Empire during a flowering of art and architecture. The MFAH partnered with the Saint Louis Art Museum to organize the exhibition, which will showcase many pieces that have never been on view in the U.S.

    While Emperor Trajan might not be the most famous — or in some cases, most infamous — of the Roman emperors, he ruled between 98 and 117 C.E. during the empire’s height and was the second of the so-called “Five Good Emperors” of the Nerva-Antonine dynasty. He was also the first emperor born outside of present-day Italy, in what is now Andalusia, Spain. During his reign, he granted citizenship and rights to some peoples from conquered lands. The exhibition will explore how this time period expanded what it meant to be a Roman and how art reflected Rome’s power and promoted the empire’s values and ideals.

    \u200bThe Museum of Fine Arts Houston presents "Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times"
      

    Photo courtesy of Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

    The Museum of Fine Arts Houston presents "Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times" ("Statue of Trajan" Minturno, Italy, 2nd century, marble, National Archaeological Museum, Naples)

    From statues of prominent men and women of the era, including Trajan, to vivid frescoes and furnishing from the villas of Pompeii, the objects in the exhibition will tell fascinating cultural and political stories of life in imperial Rome. To add context to the artworks and objects of antiquity, the MFAH will recreate a section of Trajan’s Column, which was a towering pillar with a spiraling narrative frieze, one of the few monumental sculptures to have survived the fall of Rome.

    “Art and Life in Imperial Rome: Trajan and His Times” brings such a wealth of objects to Houston thanks to unprecedented loans from the renowned antiquities collections of Italian museums including Museo Nazionale Romano, the Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli, the Parco Archeologico di Ostia, and the Musei Vaticani. It would would likely take months of travel across Italy to see this much art.

    “This is truly a rare opportunity for U.S. audiences to experience spectacular objects from this glorious era of the Roman Empire,” said Gary Tinterow, director and Margaret Alkek Williams chair of the MFAH, in a statement. “We are enormously grateful to our colleagues in Rome, Naples, and Vatican City for lending these treasures to us and broadening the appreciation of Italy’s cultural heritage.”

    museumsmuseum of fine arts houstonopenings
    news/arts

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