Former Casa Chuck resident artist and current Interim Director of Sala Diaz, Heyd Fontenot, considers various artist ecologies, cinematic and actual, and fantasizes a domicile to contain it all.
katie pell
-
-
Alejandro Diaz, Katie Pell, Ethel Shipton, and Patssi Valdez have had works acquired by the McNay, Wellesley College, and the Whitney.
-
Artpace staff and guest curators will conduct studio visits for the residency cycle next year, and with no flexibility on the deadline, artists are encouraged to apply as soon as possible.
-
Brandon Zech and Christina Rees discuss conservation nightmares, the Dust Bowl, and how well-versed Texas artists are on this subject.
-
Pell is survived by parents Anthony and Elizabeth, brother Charlie Pell, and daughter Bygoe Zubiate.
-
'Bitchen Stove' was created during Pell's 2006 residency at Artpace San Antonio, and features nods to car culture.
-
The open call is limited to artists currently living and practicing in San Antonio, and the goal is to give those artists the opportunity to have their works reviewed by a visiting curator and to expand their network and visibility.
-
“You can choose to be exceptional based on something other than pre-determined measurements of what has value.”
-
“I think it’s probably the work that people are least interested in.”
-
"I can get people to experience something or an idea that I’ve been exploring myself, and that seems really worthwhile to me."
-
'4×4: Artist Q+A' is a new video series by Walley Films in association with Glasstire.
-
Christina Rees and Brandon Zech on Texas’ second art chapel of this year, a Houston love affair with San Antonio, and a new installation in the Texas desert that makes us ponder music festival art versus serious art.
-
In conjunction with its current exhibition Texas Tough, Blue Start Contemporary Art Museum will present a “Women’s Artist Panel.” The panel will include San Antonio artists Missi Smith, Katie Pell,…
-
Remembering Cassie remembering Regis, and hoping to kind of make up for the other SA artists' short shrift in my would-be review of "San Antonio Draws."