The Dallas Art Fair boasts growing numbers over the past three years, and in its fourth year seems to have elevated to a new level of maturity with over 70 galleries in attendance. Housed in the Fashion Industry Gallery (F.I.G.) near the Nasher Sculpture Center, Dallas Museum of Art and Crow Collection—with new Rem Koolhaas, [...]
As of 4:30 pm on April 19th, the University of Texas amassed its latest piece for Landmarks public art collection—Ben Rubin’s tribute to Walter Cronkite, who attended the University in the 1930s. Titled And That’s The Way It Is projects massively sized text onto the side of a building in the Walter Cronkite Plaza. Full [...]
Filed in Art/Art History
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Also tagged Art Austin, Art/Art History, Austin, Ben Rubin, change, contemporary art, great art, humanity, Rowan Ogden, texas art, University of Texas Austin
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Irish artist Tom Molloy makes work that addresses current global affairs, collecting together and subtly altering political imagery. “Shake” stretches around a central wall in the gallery, featuring 59 black and white photographs of various world leaders — Presidents Barack Obama and George W. Bush included — shaking hands. Each photograph includes a handshake or [...]
Friday, February 17, 2012
When we think of murals on public walls, we might imagine childlike portraits stretched across city blocks—or, the popularized work of Shepard Fairey (currently in Dallas). But we might not imagine a mural which touts an anti-American slogan like, “Down with U.S.A.,” or depictions of the statue of liberty as a skeleton, which the Associated [...]
Filed in Art/Art History, Social Issues
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Also tagged Adobe Airstream, Art/Art History, Austin, change, contemporary art, great art, humanity, Lora Reynolds Gallery, progress, texas art
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Tuesday, December 6, 2011
Firstly, I’d like to say congrats to one of my favorite art spaces in Austin, Co-Lab for successfully “kickstarting” their DVD catalog. Check out the video here–super. More about Co-Lab‘s project: As a prolific artist-run project space, Co-Lab has always had a strong focus on documentation. This year, Co-Lab set out to make documentaries for every exhibition/performance the [...]
Filed in Art/Art History, Social Issues
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Also tagged Art/Art History, Austin, change, Co-Lab, consumerism, contemporary art, great art, Hoyun Son, humanity, Kickstarter, korean contemporary art, texas art
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I tagged along with Rowan Ogden to meet John Lash, owner of Austin’s Farm to Table, a few weeks ago. What’s Farm to Table? Well, when something is coming from a farm and going to a table, even within the same town, there is a holding facility—that’s Farm to Table. This holding facility, the Farm [...]
(Above: Image still from Michelle Handelman’s “Dorian, a Cinematic Perfume”) Panel discussion to coincide with the close of “Dorian, a Cinematic Perfume–” by artist Michelle Handelman. Thursday, March 24, 6:30 pm in the community room Moderated by Elizabeth Dunbar, Associate Director and Curator, Arthouse Panelists: Andy Cambell, Michelle Handelman, Rose Reyes, Ann Reynolds, kt shorb, and Noah Simblist FROM [...]
Contemplating the Austin craft scene, I’m reminded of a question my mom asked me once when discussing art. “What about functional art?” she asked. Immediately, I thought, “If the object is functional it ceases to be purely art, which is why we have categories like design and craft!!” Although, I am not espousing my statement [...]
Monday, December 13, 2010
The perfect mash-up of the Texas museum scene this month is: Vernon Fisher sitting in a stuffed-animal chair designed by the Campana brothers with one leg of the chair in Texas, Mexico, Arizona and New Mexico. I realize that this is impossible, but let me explain. Several exhibitions in Texas museums, happening in December into [...]
Filed in Art/Art History
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Also tagged Adobe Airstream, capitalism, change, contemporary art, Dallas, Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas Texas, DMA, El Paso, El Paso Museum of Art, great art, humanity, progress, texas art, The Modern, The Modern Fort Worth
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Wednesday, October 27, 2010
“Titty Cloud” immediately caught my attention at the latest opening at Domy Books, Austin; “To Climb a Mountain On Top of a Tree” is the exhibition title, a series of drawings by young Austinite-transplant William Gaynor. There was something deadpan about Gaynor’s supernatural, heavily-outlined illustrations. Perhaps, unapologetic is the word, not deadpan. The delivery goes [...]