In a way, being on the outside looking in is an apt metaphor for experiencing issues around Black hair from a Black woman’s perspective.
Nasher Sculpture Center
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Artists 18 years or older who currently live in any North Texas county may apply.
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A few words about the artist's newest work on view at the Nasher Sculpture Center.
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Christopher Blay and (momentary) guest host Hesse McGraw, Director of the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, discuss seeing the sun again, an unpronounceable show title, wild life, and an exclusive first look at the renovated CAMH.
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Brandon Zech, Christopher Blay and Christina Rees bring you Glasstire's top picks for the first big shows of 2021.
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Meek's exhibition follows other successful installations in the series, including works from Bernardo Vallerino, Giovanni Valderas, and most recently, Nyugen E. Smith.
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Covid threw a wrench in traveling exhibitions; shows planned for years are postponed, giving opportunity for museum collections in storage to come out and fill the galleries.
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“It’s always like: In here we’re an artist, in here we’re a social entrepreneur, in here we’re making policy changes. Whatever it is, it's being in a space where we feel like we’re needed the most to make social impact.”
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"These important works represent the full range of Edwards’ mastery as a sculptor, effortlessly uniting the material and conceptual in ways that resonate over time."
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Cynthia Daignault’s "Elegy (Los Angeles)" will go to the DMA, and Gabriel Rico's "Cincuenta" will go to the Nasher.
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This piece by Nicosia joins the Nasher's other works from Texas artists, including David Bates, Jim Love, James Magee, and David McManaway.
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Artists include Vincent Valdez, Guerrilla Girls, and Jenny Holzer, and Texas art spaces include Ballroom Marfa, the Blanton, DiverseWorks, the Fort Worth Modern, the Nasher, and The Contemporary Austin.
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The two works have been part of the Nasher's "Nasher Windows" series of exhibitions.
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The billboards began going up on Monday, and the project hopes to attract the attention of Texans, particularly people of color, as COVID-19 cases continue to rise across the state.
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Reopening guidelines include requirements that all staff and visitors wear face masks.
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The grantees are Sarah Ayala, Sara Cardona, Janeil Engelstad, Julia Jalowiec, David Jeremiah, Cynthia Mulcahy, Nancy Newberry, Darryl Ratcliff, Raul Rodriquez, and Third Space DFW.
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Christopher Blay and Brandon Zech run down a list of the best ongoing online programming from Texas museums.
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Protests began after George Floyd, an African American man, died in police custody a week ago.
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The program kicked off on May 22 with the work of Dallas-based artist Tamara Johnson, and continues tomorrow with Xxavier Edward Carter's 'Start Livin’ in the New World.'
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Art and food have alway coexisted.