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see this art

Houston's new LED art tunnel and 8 more can't-miss shows for September

Tarra Gaines
Sep 11, 2024 | 11:34 am

This month brings some vivid early fall colors to museums and galleries across the city. The MFAH grows their already world class Cuban collection. Forms and memory emerge at the Menil, and Rice’s Moody Center showcases artistic process.

Plus, several shows around town turn a spotlight on environmental issues. As the weather cools, we’ll also head outdoors to discover a mysterious tunnel at Discovery Green.

"Do Ho Suh: In Process" at Rice Moody Center for the Arts (now through December 21)
As a truly international artist, having found homes in Seoul, New York, and London, Do Ho Suh’s art examines themes of home, migration, displacement, and the passage of time. Perhaps appropriately, the Moody Center will play with definitions of an art exhibition, allowing Do Ho Suh to use the galleries as a studio-like space to present his on-going research and collaborative projects. “In Process” will showcase two completed installations, including the monumental, “Inverted Monument” but will also allow visitors views into in process projects, including Suh’s collaboration with Rice University engineering students on his research for “The Bridge Project,” his work to conceptualize a bridge connecting his homes in Seoul, London, and New York.

For more of Suh’s work around town, be sure to check out his “impossible” sculptural installation “Portal” in the tunnel between the MFAH’s Kinder Building and Glassell School.

“The Tunnel” at Discovery Green (now through October 6)
For a different kind of tunnel, head downtown to Discovery Green for this interactive art installation from Canadian immersive public art design organization Big Art. Built as an array of 16 vaguely diamond shaped, definitely alien-looking structures, “The Tunnel” entices explorers to enter and begin a cosmic journey. “Pilots” use an interactive device to manipulate the array, creating an infinite number of patterns of light and sound, making each journey unique. The 3D design uses over 150 LED bars — made of over 8,000 individual LEDs — that are pixel-mapped to create a vortex of light pulling visitors through the structures.

“CRYSIS” at the Museum of Fine Arts (September 13)
Visual and performing arts meet with this immersive theatrical experience from local Houston artist Chandrika Metivier. Responding to the MFAH’s mammoth summer 4-channel multimedia installation “Jacolby Satterwhite: A Metta Prayer,” Metivier will perform an immersive adaptation of a section from Ariana Reines’ Obie-winning play Telephone. Step into a kaleidoscopic universe of multimedia magic as Metivier blends theatrical elements with a cappella harmonies — creating an ode to love and resilience.

"Light Needs Shadow Needs Light…” at Art League Houston (September 13-November 23)
This exhibition of artworks by Texas photographer Kathy Vargas will include four series of hand-painted, silver gelatin photographs. Vargas uses her mastery of the photography process, layering, and painting to tell intricate stories.of family, heritage, death, and consumerism. The collection includes photos of intricate fabric with price tags that explore the cost of fashion as well as blurred portraits of Vargas’s loved ones layered with flowers and writings to symbolize human connection and family.

"Rising Water” at Art League Houston (September 13-November 23)
Winner of ALH’s 2024 Texas Artist of the Year, Beili Liu creates material-and-process-driven, site-responsive installations and performances. This celebratory exhibition showcases a compilation of Liu’s work that explores how climate issues intersect with labor, migration, and social concerns. Working with common materials such as thread, needle, scissors, feather, salt, wax, and cement, Liu creates artworks that trace the complexity of global environmental issues and crisis.

"Out of Thin Air: Emerging Forms” at Menil Drawing Institute (September 20-January 26, 2025)
“The process of becoming,” this is how the Menil describes one commonality of the 29 drawings and works on paper on view in this new exhibition. With works from some renowned modern and contemporary artists, including Lee Bontecou, John Cage, Gustavo Díaz, Hiroyuki Doi, Sonia Gechtoff, Gregory Masurovsky, Alan Saret, and Hedda Sterne, the show will examine how some artists use drawing as a meditative process to find images and forms for their work. The exclusive exhibition will include drawings acquired by John and Dominique de Menil as early as the 1950s, several gifts to the collection, and a recent acquisition.

“Out of Thin Air: Emerging Forms is a show about discovery and possibility, and the artworks on view — some of which have never been displayed at the Menil — can be considered as portals to personal reflection,” MDI curatorial associate Kirsten Marples said in a release.

"Fragments of Memory” at Menil Drawing Institute (September 20-January 26)
The personal and historical become art in this second new show at the MDI opening this month. The exhibition illustrates how artists use material forms of memory, including photos, collage, dottles, and even grocery lists within their works to depict the past in forms personal, cultural, and historical. To explore these themes, curator Kelly Montana has selected important 20th and 21st century works from the Menil’s collection including pieces by artists Wardell Milan, Gael Stack, Luc Tuymans, James Lee Byars, Jacob El Hanani, Joe Goode, Jasper Johns, Mark Lombardi, Jim Love, Walter Tandy Murch, Denyse Thomasos, Cy Twombly, and Danh Vo.

“The artists in this exhibition demonstrate a desire to say more than what personal ephemera, historical accounts, and selective memory leave behind,” assistant curator Kelly Montana said. “We hope that these works, many of which are new additions to the museum’s collection, will encourage visitors to reimagine how fraught memories and contested histories are accessed and how these recollections impact our present.”

“River on Fire” presented by DiverseWorks (September 27-November 16)
Art often provokes or makes a urgent call to action, and this is certainly true when it comes to a current issues like climate change. With a complexity we’ve come to expect from a DiverseWorks show, this multidisciplinary exhibition features 14 local, national, and international artists who wrestle with environmental issues in their work. Organized around both the ideas of Houston as the energy capital of the world and our venerability to the changing climate, the exhibition poses questions on how artists and creative practices can shift the narrative and introduce possible solutions in a city with such a complex ecosystem.

"Navigating the Waves: Contemporary Cuban Photography" at the Museum of Fine Arts (September 29-March 16, 2025)
An already prominent collection of Cuban photography becomes preeminent, as the MFAH celebrates its acquisition of 300 Cuban photographs from Chicago-based collectors Madeleine and Harvey Plonsker. This new exhibition will showcase 100 works from the collection which both traces the use of photography in Cuba over 60 years and tells the story of Cuba’s history from the mid 20th century to today.

Organized both chronologically and thematically, the exhibition will be divided up into distinct sections with focuses on the “Epic” generation of photographers working during the Cuban Revolution; life in Post-Revolution Cuba; a section titled “Memory, the Body, and Identity,” featuring photographic art in Cuba after the end of the Soviet Union and their economic support of Cuba; and a final section on contemporary, 21st century work.

“The strengths of the Plonsker Collection are unparalleled, in terms of telling the complex and compelling story of post-Revolution Cuban photography,” Malcolm Daniel, MFAH’s curator of photography said in a statement. “Combined in this exhibition with works already in the Museum’s holdings, the collection allows us to chronicle that story from the ‘epic generation,’ whose work would define the image of the Cuban Revolution, to the succeeding generations of photographers, who questioned the power of photography and its relationship to political authority and who created highly personal work in the context of a greater awareness of international contemporary art.”

The TUNNEL at Discovery Green

Courtesy of Discovery Green

Discover Green presents The Tunnel through September.

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honoring the past

Houston museum's new project preserves historic Freedmen's Town bricks

Emily Cotton
Jun 19, 2026 | 12:00 pm
Freedmen's Town Rebirth in Action pavilion rendering
Rendering courtesy of Studio Zewde
Rebirth in Action is set to open in 2027.

As Houstonians come together to celebrate Juneteenth, it’s jarring to think that this day of celebration has only been a federally-recognized holiday since 2021. After all, it was in 1865 that U.S Major General Gordon Granger arrived in Galveston on June 19 to enforce the Emancipation Proclamation of 1863. After this event many formerly enslaved Black Americans made their way to Houston, establishing what is now Houston’s very first Heritage District, known as Freedmen’s Town.

Now, the robust Houston Freedmen’s Town Conservancy, in partnership with the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, and Mount Horeb Church, are working with the City of Houston on a long overdue project, Rebirth in Action, to honor this historic site. Designed by artist Theaster Gates in partnership with landscape architect Sara Zewde, the monumental pavilion will temporarily house more than 20,000 historic bricks previously removed and preserved from Houston’s Freedmen’s Town. Houston Mayor John Whitmire attended the groundbreaking, which took place last month.

While many people recognize Galveston as the site of the first Juneteenth celebrations, both of those took place on January 1, to honor the Emancipation Proclamation. However, recent research by Mary Gibbs Jones Professor of Humanities at Rice University W. Caleb McDaniel, has uncovered that the first official Juneteenth celebration was led by two ministers, Sandy Parker and Elias Dibble, right in Freedmen’s Town in 1866. McDaniel’s fascinating article will appear in the next issue of the Journal of Texas History.

Freedmen’s Town, established in 1865 by over 1,000 newly-free Black Houstonians following Juneteenth, has significantly dwindled in recent years due to systematic reductions in resources, despite its initial 500+ historic structures, including churches, schools, and cultural institutions. Rebirth in Action aims to preserve and promote the neighborhood as a monument of Black community, agency, and heritage.

“The work of the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston is to utilize our museum as a platform for resources sharing; a platform for unearthing new conversations around gems in our city that are also right down the street,” explains Ryan Dennis, co-director and chief curator for the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston. “Artists have different practices and artists like Theaster [Gates] can really help understand preservation conditions and needs of community, revitalization, and bringing resources together to better serve a neighborhood and realize optimal benefits, particularly antiquities like the bricks in Freedman’s Town that have been taken out of the neighborhood, displaced in other areas of Houston, and not in the home where they were originally created, paid for, and laid down in (by formerly enslaved individuals), which is Freedmen’s Town.”

The first phase of Rebirth in Action involved artistic activations (including Gates’ exhibition The Gift and The Renege in 2024), artist residencies, community and stakeholder meetings, and the identification, cataloging, and preservation of over 20,000 historic bricks. The pavilion will encourage public viewing of these historic bricks and serve as a hub for engagement with the history, cultural significance, and future of Freedmen’s Town. Additionally, Hines Architecture + Design will rehabilitate three row houses into an adjoining community center.

“I think the whole project is one that’s quite interesting, useful, and productive. I think it’s important for us to think about how we can use our resources to accomplish the things that build collective wellness — right? Wellness in the space of really preserving our communities that have been disinvested in, elevating the real gems of our city,” says Dennis. “We can do that through collaborations and partnerships; we are much stronger when we can do that with others, versus by ourselves, and I think this project really speaks to that ethos.”

Phase Two has been made possible by Mount Horeb Church’s continued stewardship of both land and existing historic structures in Freedmen’s Town. The project will include an arts pavilion and community green space designed by Sara Zewde, with an installation by renowned artist Theaster Gates, plus three historic structures redesigned and restored by Daimian Hines Architecture + Design for adaptive reuse as a food pantry and community garden, after-school programming, and senior services for Mount Horeb Church, who will guide programming and operations.

The art installation will display the original Freedmen’s Town bricks that once lined the streets, giving visitors a chance to experience their significance firsthand. Working with the City of Houston and the North Houston Highway Improvement Program that will reconnect Freedmen’s Town to downtown, Phase Three will see these bricks returned to the streets in a pedestrian promenade capacity. Subsequently, the pavilion will showcase rotating artist activations.

“The Brick Pavilion for Freedmen’s Town is a project that is deeply resonant for me,” shares Gates. “In part, because there are several opportunities to cultivate community and institutional trust, to create an additional neighborhood heart, and to invest in more beauty for this hugely important district of Houston.”

Landscape architect Sara Zewde's pavilion, gardens, and landscape design will help centralize all facets of Rebirth in Action, creating a community hub: “Studio Zewde's collaboration with Theaster Gates began with a shared belief that the future of Freedmen's Town must be rooted in the wisdom of the community that built it,” she writes in an email. “The pavilion and landscape draw inspiration from the neighborhood's tradition of shared backyards that connected the community across property lines. The project builds on this inheritance by forming a shared landscape at the center of the sacred bricks and their pavilion, the restored row houses, the Freedmen's Town Conservancy Visitor Center, and Mount Horeb Baptist Church.”

Architect Daimian Hines credits Reverend Dr. Smith of Mount Horeb Church for the continued stewardship of the land and notes that Dr. Smith oftentimes remarks that the holding of the land has been a form of resistance, the act of holding the land keeping outsiders from contributing to the erasure of Freedmen’s Town and its history.

“The fact that these three houses, and more in the community, that these post-emancipation structures still exist, it wasn’t for a lack of community pressure. It was a combination of efforts by folks like Dr. Smith, who were resisting [gentrification] through ownership,” explains Hines.

“Some of the ownership of some of these properties are so complex, it was difficult for potential buyers [developers] to actually get ownership of some of these structures—I consider that sheer luck.”

Hines worked closely with the Houston Archeological and Historic Commission to propose rehabilitating, modifying, and even relocating the row houses a mere 15 feet. The gabled, cottage-style row houses date back to the late 19th century. These post-emancipation row houses were built by formerly-enslaved, new residents of Houston.

“We wanted to think through: ‘what was the original story, how did the front of the houses and the back of these structures — what role did they play in day-to-day life?’ We were able to make some strategic moves to bring that to the forefront again,” Hines says. “The Rebirth in Action project and the houses are part of a broader preservation goal within the community to not just preserve, but to reuse either for housing, or — in this case — adaptive reuse as a community space.”

Hines notes that one of the row houses is of double-door configuration. This typology signifies that it was most likely a boarding house in its prime, a time when Black Americans weren’t welcome in downtown hotels. The two front doors let travelers know that they were welcome to rent a safe place to stay. Together, the three row houses will offer approximately 3,200-3,600 square feet of space, plus a large back porch that will face the pavilion.

As resources were often few and far between in post-emancipation Freedmen’s Town, the cladding on row houses was patchwork in appearance, as purchasing gaps meant that continuing on with the same materials was unlikely. Regardless, these homes were remarkably well constructed, with solid wood, wooden dowels, and shiplap interior walls. These construction methods, along with allowances for airflow, contributed significantly to their preservation.

“The one thing about these structures is, that as robust as they are, they have taken a beating,” says Hines. “The actual wood, the detailing, a lot of that has been lost, but these structures tell a story. This is a project I knew I wanted to be personally involved in, and my firm. [The structures] will be able to continue telling a story and play an active role in that community, and that’s why I’m excited.”

Freedmen's Town Rebirth in Action pavilion rendering

Rendering courtesy of Studio Zewde

Rebirth in Action is set to open in 2027.

museums contemporary art museum houston freedmen's town visual-art
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