The City of Houston unveiled a new public art monument created by local artists Charisse Pearlina Weston and Jamal Cyrus honoring Barbara C. Jordan.
jamal cyrus
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News
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The Board of Trustees of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation has named Houston artist Jamal Cyrus and Dallas artist Evita Tezeno as 2023 Guggenheim Fellows.
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The Houston Endowment recently moved into a new building and worked with Weingarten Art Group to acquire artwork for the space by Houston artists.
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Cyrus chooses materials that are part of everyone’s daily existence — like denim, and music — and his choices grant access for all to this exhibition.
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Jessica Fuentes picks up on a common theme of works on view at the 2022 Dallas Art Fair.
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Ruby City acquires a piece by Jamal Cyrus, and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth will debut work by the artist in an upcoming solo exhibition.
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The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth has announced the 2022 spring schedule for its long-standing lecture series, Tuesday Evenings at the Modern.
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This spring, art enthusiasts across Texas will have various opportunities to encounter spaces featuring sound-based art.
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Glasstire's staff and contributors share which Texas-based shows, events, and works made their personal “best” lists for 2021.
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News
Jamal Cyrus and Charisse Pearlina Weston to Collaborate on Barbara Jordan Monument in Houston
by Glasstireby GlasstireThe monument will adorn the grounds of the Houston Public Library’s African American Library at the Gregory School.
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Cyrus has consistently made work that speaks to large, relevant, and topical issues while still managing to startle.
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“For me, collage is based on collision. And I think that collision is indebted to the chance encounter.”
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This week: a fresh look at portraiture in San Antonio, skateboard culture in DFW, and a much-anticipated mid-career retrospective in Houston.
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This show will be followed by Cyrus' solo exhibition at The Blaffer Museum of Art in Houston later this year.
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“Our desire to partner with incredible museums in San Antonio and Houston led us to organize a project that is iterative in form and expansive in scale.”
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Christopher Blay and Christina Rees on a show that deconstructs our public-facing identities, a Hill Country show featuring 50 years of a Texas printmaker’s history, and a Dallas show featuring some deceptively sublime imagery.
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The series features works by Jamal Cyrus, Eric Gyamfi, Zina Saro-Wiwa, and Aida Silvestri at four different locations across Houston's Arts District.
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The takeover included more than 70 posts that serve as a primer on UH, the Third Ward, and other Houston history.
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Kicking off the program on July 15, artist Jamal Cyrus will be in conversation with Menil curator Michelle White.
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The revelation about George Floyd's time in Houston has completely upended my perspective on "Slowed."