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    Best March Art

    FotoFest, Bayou City Fest, and 9 more can't-miss Houston art happenings for March

    Tarra Gaines
    Mar 13, 2024 | 9:00 am

    March puts a spring in our step as we head out for several art walks both inside and outdoors. We’ve got lots of art festivals, spring shows, and here-and-gone special art events on our must-see list. From new outdoor sculptures in the Heights to a new art pop-up installation series at City Place to FotoFest at Sawyer Yards to one of Houston’s favorite art parties downtown, art is blossoming everywhere this month.

    “Anthony Almendárez: Hello, My Name Is ____” from DiverseWorks (now through March 16)

    Taking over the exhibition space at MATCH, this multi-channel video and sound installation draws upon survey questions related to employment and labor policies in the United States. As an artist and composer working with sound, video, photo and live performances, Almendárez’s work explores different modes of storytelling. Like much of his work, “Hello” confronts audiences with the nature of identity and how we construct it. This piece also explores the parallels and contradictions between predominantly accepted notions of work vs. artistic labor.

    “hallowed be thy name” at Art League Houston (now through April 20)

    This new exhibition of textiles, sculpture, and mixed media installation by Chicago-based artist Krista Chalkle takes the images and motifs from Gothic cathedrals and reimagines them as exaltations of queerness. The exhibition features work that emulates stained glass windows and church ritual fabric pieces using them the forms to recount stories of queer agency and liberation. As a whole, the show works to deconstruct the traditional hierarchical structure of the Church in order to emphasize principle tenets of community and fellowship.

    “Visions via Riding High” at Art League Houston (now through April 20)

    Creating paintings that deal with the relationship between cars and memory, the Detroit-born, Houston-based artist Alexis Pye’s work certainly resonate with both cities. Many of the works in the exhibition depict a real neighborhood in the east side of Detroit, but with painterly embellishment that take the images into the fantastic. ALH notes that in Pye’s art, the car becomes a moving exploration of Black culture within and outside of its marginalized constructs. The images challenge perceived ideas of Blackness that are constantly moving forward and becoming looser and abstract.

    “FotoFest Biennial 2024: Critical Geography” at Silver Street Studios (now through April 21)

    We always embark upon a journey when wandering through a new FotoFest exhibition, but this year theme’s takes that figurative idea and makes it literal and logistical as the Fest’s artists take a critical eye to geography in its myriad of forms, with a special focus on environmental issues. The exhibition highlights a range of unorthodox strategies these photographers use to construct new narratives around place and community while imagining alternative organizations of social space.

    Periwinkle by The Color Condition Ribbon Cutting and Celebration
    Photo courtesy of The Color Condition

    City Place presents Periwinkle by The Color Condition.

    “Our intent is that the 2024 Biennial, featuring both existing and newly commissioned works from local and international artists, will allow viewers to engage in important dialogues around the social dimensions of space and our shared planet,” says Steven Evans, Executive Director of FotoFest. “We look forward to once again celebrating Houston’s vibrant art and photo community while embracing these new perspectives around place-making, the image, and geography.”

    The Art Car Museum (closing April 28)

    As CultureMap reported the only-in-Houston, iconic museum dedicated to the art car is set to close next month. Don't miss a chance to take one last spin around the museum. The latest, and now likely last, of the special exhibitions the museum presented over the years is “Creative Era of Ann Harithas,” a showcase of the work of the museum’s co-founder. The exhibition stands as both a retrospective of Harithas's body of work as an artist and a tribute to the era of creativity ignited by Harithas. Featuring pieces from her extensive body of collage works from the 1980s to the 2010s, the exhibition also showcases her own art car creations and those she commissioned and collected.

    “Periwinkle” by The Color Condition at City Place (now through June)

    This month the north Houston mixed-use development City Place will unveil the first of a new series of Instaworthy pop-up art installations, “Periwinkle” by Dallas based installation creators, the Color Condition, a.k.a Sunny Sliger and Marianne Newsom. The creative collaborators use long streamers to reshape and add color to outdoor landscapes and interior spaces. The immersive and expansive installation blends vibrant colors, patterns, and movement to create fantastical realms reminiscent of Candyland, Peter Pan, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, and Charlie and the Chocolate Factory.

    "True North 2024" along Height Blvd. (now through December)

    For the last decade, spring has given Houston art lovers the perfect reason to take a walk along the boulevard — Heights Blvd that is — for a look at what new contemporary sculptures have grown amid the tree-lined esplanade. From whimsical to topical, the works always stop traffic and give us reason to get out and take a slow stroll through the artwork. As always, this artful treat is thanks to an all-volunteer team, along with the Houston Heights Association in cooperation with the City of Houston Parks and Recreation and Public Works Departments and the Houston Mayor’s Office of Cultural Affairs.

    This year’s eight chosen Texas artists are Nela Garzón, Dion Laurent, Wyatt Little, Suzette Mouchaty and Patrick Renner, of Houston, and Clayton Hurt, Ricardo Paniagua and Art Shirer, of Dallas, with the installations going up throughout the month. Houston artist and biology professor (UH-Downtown) Mouchaty, who is also a UH-Downtown biology professor, has already erected "Monument to Sea Slugs,” inspired by marine nudibranchs, and Nela Garzón’s "Pre-Columbian Unlooted Bat or Vampire for the New World" has also been seen hanging in the 800 block area.

    Samora Pinderhughes: "The Healing Project” at Eldorado Ballroom (March 21)

    While we might only have one night to catch this performance artwork, several leading Houston art organization partnered to bring Pinderhughes’s work to Houston, including Cynthia Woods Mitchell Center for the Arts, Project Row Houses, and Hobby Center for Public Affairs at the University of Houston. As a vocalist, pianist, artist, and filmmaker Pinderhughes creates large, multi-disciplinary projects, which invite audiences to examine what is visible and what is hidden in our daily lives, and how to make social change. “The Healing Project” is an examination of the prison industrial complex in the United States, amplifying the testimonials of those affected by incarceration, policing, violence, and detention through original music and film.

    Yet, Pinderhughes also calls the work an empathetic experience for both artist, subjects and audiences, uniting those who have been silenced with storytellers to create deeply affecting art rooted in connectivity and compassion.

    "Ruth Asawa Through Line" at Menil Drawing Institute (March 22-July 1)

    Though perhaps more widely known for her sculpture artwork, the pioneering artist made drawing a lifetime practice that was the foundation of her creations. This retrospective of her works on paper features drawings, collages, watercolors, and sketchbooks alongside stamped prints, paperfolds, and copper-foil works, showing the breadth of Asawa’s innovative practice.

    Organized thematically around Asawa’s creative period, influences, and medium, the exhibition touches on the complexity of Asawa’s work from the inspiration of origami, to her love of patterns and how her sculptures became an extension of her drawings.

    “Ruth Asawa’s drawings are complex and rich, owing much to her striking creativity, her curiosity about the world around her, her cultural background as an American artist of Japanese descent, and her European-based artistic training in the Bauhaus tradition,” states Menil director, Rebecca Rabinow. “The Menil Collection and the Whitney Museum of American Art are honored to present this first retrospective survey of her drawings.”

    Bayou City Art Festival Spring Downtown Art Festival at Sam Houston Park (March 23-24)

    If it’s March, it’s time to head downtown for one of our favorite outdoor art seeing and buying events. This year the Festival has gathered more than 250 artists from around the country, representing 19 different disciplines, to showcase their art. The featured artist for the Spring Festival is Karina Llergo, a mixed media artist from Chicago who strives to capture the dynamic energy of the human body and its soulful essence transforming figures into fluid entities, incorporating dance, air, and water to create an otherworldly likeness. Don’t miss an exhibition of student artwork composed of the top 30 finalists from the Middle School Art Competition.

    Come for the art but stay for the food and entertainment, as the fest also features two entertainment stages, a food truck park, a craft beer and wine garden, additional live entertainment and beverage stations throughout the festival, an Active Imagination Zone, a VIP Hospitality Lounge, and more.

    “Night Light” along the Buffalo Bayou East trails (April 6)

    Yes, we’re putting this media art event on our calendar a little early, but we don’t want to miss this night of art light, as it only comes around once a year. Presented by Buffalo Bayou Partnership and the Aurora Picture Show, the evening will showcase four new, site-specific art installations located throughout Tony Marron Park with video works projected on surfaces along a half-mile stretch of waterfront trails. Look for abstract and experimental video and light artworks from celebrated Houston artists Ronald Llewellyn Jones, Violette Bule, and the duo of Nick Vaughan & Jake Margolin. These distinct pieces will engage with and animate infrastructure and site features, including the water itself. The evening will also feature the premiere of “HomeBayou,” a stop-motion short film about the Buffalo Bayou East area created by artist Ezra Wube in collaboration with East End and Fifth Ward residents.

    news/arts

    Best June Theater

    The 10 best plays, musicals, and ballets to see in Houston this month

    Tarra Gaines
    Jun 3, 2026 | 10:35 am
    The Company of the Second North American tour of Clue
    Photo by Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade
    Broadway at the Hobby Center presents Clue

    Musicals take the mic across Houston stages this June. From the tragic to the silly, everyone’s got a number, or dozen, to sing. Ironically, the one play exception is from the presenter Houstonians rely on to bring us the hottest Broadway musicals, Broadway at the Hobby Center, who instead gives us a Clue to solve a madcap summer mystery. We’re also highlighting some theatrical dance shows this month bringing us kinetic stories of love and life.

    Spamilton: An American Parody at Stages (now through June 21)
    Parodies of cultural phenomenons are as American as the founding fathers and Broadway itself, so if any musical deserves a gentle satire, it’s Hamilton. Written by Gerard Alessandrini, who created the long-running Forbidden Broadway, Spamilton spreads its comedy wide, taking on the show Hamilton, as well as Lin-Manuel Miranda’s journey to write a revolutionary new musical and save Broadway. Along the way, Spamilton takes shots at other big musicals like Book of Mormon, Lion King, and Cats.

    To top it off, Stages also adds a mini musical, 21 Chump Street, to the end of every performance. Running under 20 minutes, Chump Street was created by Lin-Manuel Miranda based on an episode of This American Life. While the musical is rarely performed by itself because of the short length, Stages is adding it on as a special treat for Miranda fans.

    Clue presented by Broadway at the Hobby Center (June 9-14)
    While Broadway at the Hobby Center usually presents touring musicals, they occasionally slip in the odd play, and this looks to be great fun. Clue is the ultimate comic whodunit based on the cult '80s film and classic board game. Six mysterious guests, who may or may not know each other, assemble at Boddy Manor to dine on red herrings and then play a little after dinner game of blackmail, threats, and murder. Was it Mrs. Peacock in the study with the knife, Colonel Mustard in the library with the wrench, or Miss Scarlet in the conservatory with a candlestick? Did the butler do it all along? Or perhaps the twisty ending only leads to more twists.

    Giselle from Houston Ballet (June 11-21)
    With an emotional story that brings audiences to tears even while awed by the dance, Giselle has been embraced by ballet companies and choreographers for almost two centuries. Just a decade ago, Houston Ballet artistic director Stanton Welch brought his own interpretation of this tragic story of a beautiful peasant girl who falls in love with a duke, but he later betrays her. Welch used composer Adolphe Adam’s unedited score to expand the drama and allow the cast to explore the complexities of their roles.

    Ballets Jazz Montréal, Dance Me: The Music of Leonard Cohen presented by Performing Arts Houston (June 12-13)
    Poetry and deep storytelling were always inherent in the songs of Canadian songwriter and singer Leonard Cohen. Ballets Jazz Montréal, the acclaimed dance company from Cohen’s hometown, put its bodies into those stories told in some of his most iconic songs like, “Suzanne,” “So Long, Marianne,” “Dance Me to the End of Love,” and of course, “Hallelujah.” Three international choreographers collaborated on this “dance concert,” including Andonis Foniadakis, Ihsan Rustem, and Annabelle Lopez Ochoa, whose stunning Broken Wings Frida Kahlo ballet just wowed Houston Ballet audiences in March. Dance Me combines scenic, visual, musical, dramaturgical, and choreographic writing to pay tribute to one of Montreal’s greatest artists.

    Songs for a New World from Garden Theatre (June 12-14)
    Calling it a musical theater extravaganza, the company is producing three musical shows in one weekend. Running June 12 and 13, the unique Songs for a New World from Tony winning composer Jason Robert Brown delivers song and characters connected by the choices humans must make and the consequences they bring. The one-woman cabaret Not Your Ingenue will also be in the lineup on June 13. Then this musical mini-festival ends with the rousing debut of Garden’s original cabaret show From Seed To Stage. Timed with the company's fifth anniversary, Seed will feature 35 returning cast members from previous Garden productions, singing some of their favorite numbers from five years of musicals.

    The Hunchback of Notre Dame from Houston Broadway Theatre (June 16-July 5)
    One of Houston’s newest theater companies will ring the bell on this Disney musical that’s been a favorite regionally and internationally but has never actually had a big Broadway run. Based on the Victor Hugo novel and the Disney animated adaptation, the musical tells the emotional tale of the orphaned and disabled Paris cathedral bell ringer, Quasimodo, and his love for the kind and independent Romani woman, Esmeralda. The musical weaves songs from the film and new music for the stage, all by Oscar winning composer Alan Menken. The lavish Houston production boasts a 21-piece live orchestra on stage, making this the first time this expanded orchestration will be performed in the U.S.

    Tamarie’s Greatest Hits, Volume 3 from Catastrophic Theatre (June 18-August 1)
    Summer brings one of Houston's longest running theatrical traditions, another new comedy from the wonderfully warped mind of Catastrophic’s cofounder, Tamarie Cooper. Every decade, Tamarie does a greatest hits compilation show with some of the best scenes, skits, and songs from the previous nine shows. According to Catastrophic, we can all look forward to a “ridiculous” new script and a few brand new songs to tie the whole thing together. Many of the company’s wild regulars, including a few we haven’t seen in the summer show in a while, will be along for the ride, likely vying for the most outrageous performance.

    Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat at A.D. Players (June 24-July 19)
    Somehow this will be the first time Houston’s spiritual theater company brings to stage this early Andrew Lloyd Webber hit musical. The story follows young Joseph, favorite son of Biblical patriarch, Jacob. Left for dead by jealous brothers, Joseph sets out on a series of adventures, including a stint as a dream interpreter. He eventually rises to power as the man behind the throne of Egypt. Filled with catchy songs like “Any Dream Will Do,” the somewhat campy musical still wrestles with weighty themes like family loyalty and betrayal.

    Get Ready at Ensemble Theatre (June 26-July 26)
    Filled with nostalgia, complex comedy, and hope, the show puts us in the rehearsal room for the reunion of the fictitious Doves, a 1950s doo-wop group that might be having a resurgence after one of their old songs makes it back on the charts. Can these five former friends, now older but perhaps wiser, find that musical magic again, or will the squabbles of the past break them up once more? Ensemble won critical praise when it produced this show during the 30th anniversary season. Now as it wrap up the 25-26 lineup, this season topper will Get (Houston) Ready for Ensemble’s upcoming 50th anniversary.

    Forever Nebrada present by Voices of Arts Central (June 27)
    Houston Ballet principal dancer Karina González pays tribute to pioneering Latin American choreographer Vicente Nebrada (1930-2002) with this special production from the organization she founded last year to present innovative artistic projects that connect dance, culture, and storytelling. Featuring dancers from Houston Ballet and Oklahoma City Ballet, Forever Nebrada will give audiences rare insight into Nebrada’s repertoire, dance vision, and how Venezuelan cultural heritage influenced his work. González says she hopes the production will be both a celebration of Nebrada’s legacy but will also be a way to bring together artists and audiences from across the diverse Houston community.


    The Company of the Second North American tour of Clue
    Photo by Evan Zimmerman for MurphyMade

    Broadway at the Hobby Center presents Clue.

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