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    Must-see Art

    Meow Wolf's debut leads 9 can't-miss Houston art openings for October

    Tarra Gaines
    Oct 11, 2024 | 10:15 am

    Many diverse and major art exhibitions debut this month, as the fall art season kicks into gear. The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston gets spiritual. The Menil Collection finds folly and chance can lead to extraordinary creations, and the Asia Society launches into space art. We’ll also head to the park for the Bayou City Art Festival and turn our radios on as Meow Wolf hits the art waves with Radio Tave.

    “Solid State - A Celebration of the Material World” at Site Gallery Houston at The Silos (now through November 30)
    Part of Sculpture Month, this group show’s playful title refers to the classical materials for sculptures such as marble, bronze, and terracotta, while also hinting at the 21st century state of sculpture which is sometime created and built from concrete, steel, iron, plastic, found objects, and even organic material and LED light sources. Featuring Houston and Texas artists, the works will be on view in one of the city’s most unique art spaces, the former rice silos of Sawyer Yards.

    “Proposal for a 28th Amendment? Is It Possible To Amend An Unequal System?” at Project Row Houses (now through January 26, 2025)
    This interactive art installation by artist collaborators Alex Strada and Tali Keren will invite visitors to engage critically with the U.S. Constitution and pose the two questions of the title. The exhibition features sonic soapbox sculptures that build upon the history of the soapbox as a site of collective struggle, while also emphasizing listening, mutuality, and access. Visitors can enter the soapboxes to listen to archival recordings and then add their responses. Those new voices will be added to the archive and will be heard by new audiences in future installations of the work. With Project Row Houses as a central hub, elements of the project will also be on view at the Houston Museum of African American Culture and Lawndale Art Center, creating space for civic dialogue across the city during this election year.

    Bayou City Art Festival at Memorial Park (October 11-13)
    Cooler days and nights make for a great art weekend in Memorial Park for one of our favorite art festivals of the year. Bringing more than 250 local and national artists together in one place, the festival also supports local organizations and illustrates the impact that art has on the Houston community. Wander amid the booths featuring one-of-a-kind art, prints, jewelry, sculptures, functional art, and maybe get that holiday shopping done early. Along with all that art, the three-day festival features live entertainment stages, a food truck park, a craft beer and wine garden, an Active Imagination Zone for kids, and a VIP Hospitality Lounge.

    “Makeshift Memorials, Small Revolutions” at Blaffer Art Museum (October 11, 2024-March 9, 2025)
    Examining the shifts in dilated time, ritual, memory-keeping, and community-building in artistic practices in the years 2020-2024, this exhibition features contemporary artists who sometimes act as activists and chroniclers of the world with their work. According to the Blaffer, the show will highlight artists as prognosticators and trace their evolving practices and approaches, informed by activism and the creation of mutual aid networks spurred from lived experiences

    “Tacita Dean: Blind Folly” at the Menil Collection (October 11, 2024–April 19, 2025)
    In this first major museum survey of Berlin and Los Angeles-based British artist Tacita Dean, “Blind Folly” will focus on Dean’s approach to creating art though a chance-based drawing process. From film to printmaking, Dean lets the behavior of her mediums dictate the results of her work, letting chance and fate factor into her artistic creations. The exhibition will also feature new works inspired by Dean’s time in Houston, some following her residency at the Menil’s Cy Twombly Gallery.

    “Weaving together an array of subjects, from classical mythological narratives to natural phenomena, Tacita Dean’s work presents a poignant and urgent reflection on experience in an increasingly virtual and ecologically volatile world,” describes Menil senior curator Michelle White. “In this moment, she shows us the power of analogue through the act of drawing.”

    “Space City: Art in the Age of Artemis” at Asia Society Texas (October 17, 2024-March 16, 2025)
    Featuring the work of 31 contemporary artists exploring the wonders and mysteries of outer space, the show will “orbit” around four themes: Origins, Celestial Bodies, Space Technology, and Other Worlds. The exhibition also showcases artists with current or previous ties to Houston and includes nine newly commissioned works from Houston-based artists. Keeping with the space and science themes, “Space City” will include works of more traditional medium, like painting, ceramics, and photography, but also cutting-edge light and sound artworks.

    “Grounded in Clay: The Spirit of Pueblo Pottery” at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (October 20, 2024-January 12, 2025)
    This first Native-curated exhibition at the MFAH will focus on Pueblo voices and aesthetics while showcasing over 100 historical, modern, and contemporary objects in clay. Along with these striking works of art, the exhibition lays new ground in curating as “Grounded in Clay” gives voice to the Pueblo Pottery Collective, a group of more than 60 individual members of 21 tribal communities. Together, they selected and wrote about artistically and culturally distinctive pots from two significant Pueblo pottery collections — the Indian Arts Research Center of the School for Advanced Research (SAR) in Santa Fe, New Mexico, and the Vilcek Foundation in New York.

    “The visual and material languages of Native pottery and intergenerational narratives are highlighted throughout the exhibition,” explains Chelsea Dacus, assistant curator, MFAH, and organizing curator for the Houston presentation. “Choices were elicited from the curators and organized into the themes of Ancestors, Utility, Elements, and Connections, ones which are important to Native knowledge and understanding. Label texts consist of personal reactions, poems, and stories by the curators, which bring the artworks to life and exhibit the intangible force that they have in the lives and cultures of the Pueblo peoples.”

    “Living with the Gods: Art, Beliefs, and Peoples” at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (October 27, 2024–January 20, 2025)
    For what will likely be one of the largest exhibitions of the fall, the MFAH invited British art historian and longtime museum director Neil MacGregor to revisit his 2017 BBC radio series and book of the same title to organize this exhibition of great objects from the MFAH’s collection and from museums around the world. From ancient statues and masks to contemporary video works, these objects of art and religion all have in common is they were created with some spiritual intent. Displayed across 11 galleries, over 200 masterpieces will be organized around elemental themes: the cosmos, light, water, and fire; the mysteries of life and death; the divine word; and pilgrimage.

    “For millennia, people have been making art to communicate with their God or gods and to sustain their communities,” described MFAH director Gary Tinterow. “Neil MacGregor’s acclaimed 2017 BBC radio series and book brilliantly chronicled this enduring form of human expression. We are honored that he brought that perspective to Houston, making it visible through objects chosen from our own collections as well as some truly exceptional loans. This exhibition is a magnificent capstone to our first century as a museum."

    Radio Tave at Meow Wolf Houston (opening October 31)
    After over a year of waiting, the Santa Fe art collective Meow Wolf opens its latest immersive exhibition in Houston’s historical Fifth Ward. Like previous Meow Wolf immersive experiences in Santa Fe, Vegas and Grapevine, Texas, Radio Tave will have an original, science fiction narrative that connects together other worldly art pieces and installations from international, national and local artists. Visitors will step into a giant, building-sized exhibition and enter a story where a radio station has been transported to another dimension. Traveling within the story and across art dimension, we’ll find a labyrinth of paths, portals, and hidden doors, all filled with interactive mysteries for guests to solve. The space features dozens of rooms, designed by more than 100 artists — over 50 of whom are based in Texas.

    Bayou City Arts Festival
      
    Photo courtesy of Bayou City Arts Festival

    Art Colony Association, Inc. presents Bayou City Art Festival in Memorial Park

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    Best April Art openings

    Art cars, elephants, and 8 more can't-miss April openings in Houston

    Tarra Gaines
    Apr 8, 2025 | 12:31 pm
    ​The "Great Elephant Migration" herd arrives in Hermann park.
    Photo by Tasha Gorel
    The "Great Elephant Migration" herd arrives in Hermann park.

    April is the perfect month to experience art all around Houston, especially outdoors. With all the festivals and free, large-scale installations opening this month, we have a herd of new art to explore.

    But if the days get hot, museums and galleries will also welcome Houstonians inside for some cool and colorful exhibitions. Look for exciting new shows opening in the Museum District, plus both the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and Contemporary Arts Museum Houston celebrate young local artists.

    "The Great Elephant Migration" at Hermann Park (now through April 30)
    Art stampedes through Houston this month, as this mammoth installation of 100 life-sized Indian elephant sculptures makes a home in the park. Houston is the latest stop in the installation’s migration across the U.S. to spread a message of peaceful coexistence between humans and animals. For this special Hermann Park visit, the elephants are welcoming a new addition to their herd, Matt, a massive tusker based on a real life Kenyan elephant. Beyond the wonder of wandering through such an awe-inspiring installation, “Migration” contains a multitude of layers, both literally and figuratively. These artworks were created by The Real Elephant Collective, a community of 200 Indigenous artisans living within India’s Nilgiri Biosphere Reserve, and sculpted from the invasive Lantana camara plant. This vegetation takes over Indian forests, essentially chocking the elephant’s native food supply. Houston is the perfect temporary home for this message of care and conservation, as Lantana is invasive in Texas, as well.

    “Empty Bowls Invitational Exhibition” at Archway Gallery (now through April 30)

    \u200bThe "Great Elephant Migration" herd arrives in Hermann park.
      

    Photo by Tasha Gorel

    The "Great Elephant Migration" herd arrives in Hermann park.

    If you missed the annual Empty Bowls fundraiser for the Houston Food Bank last month, there’s still time to check out this benefit exhibition at Archway Gallery. More than 30 artfully crafted, one-of-a-kind bowls will be displayed along with work submitted by both 2D and 3D Archway Gallery artists, including Chris Alexander, Carol Berger, Harold Joiner, Gözde Kaya, Isabel Perreau, Shirl Riccetti, John Slaby, and Liz Conces Spencer. The Empty Bowls artwork will be available through the month of April with proceeds benefiting the Houston Food Bank.

    “Flower Clouds” at City Place (now through April 30)
    We’ve been watching all the vivid and innovative outdoor art installations spring up at City Place for some time now, and this latest has us floating on cloud nine. Created by the London-based studio Graphic Rewilding, this collection of park benches will make for the perfect place to while away a spring day. The giant benches depict over 25 species of natural vegetation (as well as insects and birds) native to the Texas Gulf Coast in all their colorful glory. Using these places of rest as a canvas and calling their work “meadowscapes,” Graphic Rewilding want the benches and their illustrated wildlife to rekindle a human connection to nature while also underscoring the joys of home-grown local culture. While these spring flowers will bloom for a short time before disappearing in May, look for them to pop back up this summer from June 1-July 27.

    “Pandemic Made” at Houston Center for Photography (April 10-June 1)
    The Covid pandemic was not just a specific set of dates, but also a perception-shifting event for the world. This group exhibition featuring the work of Christopher Lowell, Sandra Klein, Brad Ogbonna, Ryan Frigillana, and Safi Alia Shabaik, will showcase photographic art grounded in the specific time period but also made under a great change in artistic practice.

    “While all the works in this exhibition were born out of covid and conceptually touch on the pandemic, it is just as much about the artist’s compulsion to create — even in the most extreme of times, especially in the most extreme of times,” states the exhibition curator, Anne Leighton Massoni. “This exhibition exalts the creative’s relentless need to share their unique sensibilities, invest in their artistic practice, and respond to the calling of their muses in spite of — and in response to — the reality surrounding them,”

    “Sonya Clark: We Are Each Other” at Center for Contemporary Craft and Houston Museum of African American Culture (April 12-August 16)
    It will take two Museum District institutions partnering to deliver this major exhibition of the acclaimed fiber artist's large-scale installations. Clark creates big with her community-centered and participatory projects, and visitors will definitely want to make the short trip between HCCC and HMAAC in order to see these multifaceted endeavors, including“The Beaded Prayers Project” (1998-ongoing), “The Hair Craft Project” (2014), and the “Monumental Cloth series” (2019). Using everyday fiber materials, such as hair, flags, and found fabric, as well as a range of textile techniques – including weaving, braiding, quilting, and beading – Clark’s work explores issues of history, racial injustice, cultural legacies, and reconciliation.

    “For Sonya Clark, craft and community are intertwined, and we hope that this iteration of the exhibition reflects the relationship between legacies of craft and the African American experience in the United States,” described organizing curators John Guess Jr., founding CEO of HMAAC, and Sarah Darro, curator and exhibitions director of HCCC, in a statement about this unique collaboration. “Presenting ‘We Are Each Other’ across our institutions, which are devoted to African American culture and contemporary craft practice, respectively, embodies the collaborative spirit that defines Clark’s oeuvre.”

    “Eye on Houston: High School Documentary Photography” at Museum of Fine Arts (now through Spring 2026)
    Every spring we get a peek at tomorrow’s artists with this annual exhibition of student photography from area high schools. The show always becomes a celebration of Houston’s diverse neighborhoods from the perspective of these budding artists who live here. From friendships, to Houston landscapes, to the rooms of their lives that reflect their innermost thoughts and dreams, the exhibition presents the beauty and dynamics of the the city and our rising generation through the images captured by students representing eight high schools: Bellaire, Carnegie Vanguard, DeBakey, Eastwood Academy, Heights, Washington, Westside, and Jack Yates.

    38th Annual Houston Art Car Parade & Festival at various locations throughout Houston (April 10-13)
    One of Houston's favorite annual multi-day art events begins early with the Main Street Drag, as the art cars cruise to locations across the city and visit individuals who may not have the opportunity to attend the actual parade, like schools, nursing homes, developmental centers, and hospitals. Later that day, Discovery Green and Avenida Houston offer a preview art of over 100 art cars. Come out for a close look at the cars, meet the artists, and enjoy live music and kids’ crafts. Friday night, don’t miss the wild costumes, live music, interactive and performance art, food, drinks, and a huge selection of illuminated and fire-breathing art cars at the annual Legendary Art Car Ball at the Orange Show World Headquarters.

    Saturday brings the big parade, as 250 rolling masterpieces cruise through downtown and along Allen Parkway. One of the greatest athletes of track and field, Houston’s own Carl Lewis, takes the wheel as the parade’s grand marshal. Then, there’s no party like an after party, as the crowds head over to Market Square Park to experience dozens of art cars lining Preston and Congress Streets along with live music, bubble stations, photo ops, and family-friendly fun. On Sunday, the weekend ends with the Art Car Awards Ceremony back at the Orange Show Headquarters. Over $15,000 will be distributed to Art Car artists, school, and nonprofit groups in various categories through a judging process that rates entries based on their creativity, artistic techniques, and inspiration.

    Woodlands Waterway Arts Festival at Town Green Park (April 11-13)
    Enjoy art along the water as one of the Woodlands’ favorite festivals celebrates its 20th anniversary. Set along the banks of The Woodlands Waterway in Town Green Park, festival guests will have the opportunity to enjoy a vibrant outdoor gallery with authors, music, food, and kids' activities while shopping for art created by local, national, and international artists working in a variety of mediums. For those wanting some performance art amid their visual art, look for live music concerts, dance performances, poetry readings, and storytelling throughout the 3 days of the festival.

    “Out of Stock” at Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (April 11-October 19)
    Once again the CAMH showcases Houston’s young artists with another round of this special exhibition of work from over 25 local teens. The budding artist created new work in response to questions of consumer culture, including: What is the line between product and person? What are you consuming? Is it consuming you? When does consumption cross the line between want and need?

    Taken together, these pieces give insight to a generation growing up amid a myriad of consumer choices in a world of finite resources. The CAMH says the show will feature teen artists grappling with the symptoms of consumption society, with works exploring subjects like doom-scrolling, burnout, the pharmaceutical industrial complex, and the human exploitations of war and labor.

    “Hung Hsien: Between Worlds” at Asia Society (April 16-September 21)
    Though Hung Hsien (also known as Margaret Chang) has had a remarkable career, this will be the first major retrospective of the pioneering ink painter’s work. Born in China, Hsien was studying and working in the U.S in the 1960s when she invented a unique painting language that bridges traditional Chinese brushwork and Western abstraction. This landmark exhibition brings together over 50 works, spanning more than 70 years, from private collections and the artist’s personal archives. The show highlights Hung’s artistic evolution as she synthesized Eastern and Western artistic traditions and visions. The Asia Society notes that from the vivid, swirling compositions of her 1970s abstractions to her mature meditative works inspired by nature, her paintings reflect a lifelong commitment to innovation.

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