April 10, 2020. Fort Worth, TX.
Drive By
-
-
The artists of "Resight" have created the Instagram-based platform called The Pandemic Archive.
-
Like most artists right now, Stinnett is using time at home to think and to make.
-
Curator of Galveston Arts Center, Dennis Nance, gives himself a haircut at home. He's chosen "Home Remedy Mixtape #1" as his background music.
-
Alain Resnais' melancholic, rapturous depiction of a brief encounter between two married people in the scarred city of Hiroshima is a jewel of the French New Wave movement.
-
Drive By
“Lucas, Can You See This?” National Cowboy Museum In Oklahoma Turns Over Twitter Account To Security Guard
The move has left the public with a trove of unforgettable tweets that adds some levity to strange times.
-
The one-day, four-person show on Sunday, March 22 took one to four visitors at a time, and by appointment only.
-
Phewwwww. This was a recommendation by a friend (thanks?) and is one of the scariest and most unsettling things I’ve ever seen.
-
In this highly meta play-within-a-play, Juliette Binoche plays a famed actress returning to her breakthrough work, this time playing the older woman instead of the ingénue.
-
New series: Glasstire's Neil Fauerso brings you interesting (perhaps unexpected) movie recommendations that you can stream at home.
-
Wilson's IG is always good, but if you need a lovely distraction for a few minutes that connects you back to this crazy shared experience, we highly recommend checking it out.
-
Material Art Fair, CDMX, Vol. 7, Feb. 7-9, 2020
-
Ripple's one-week IG takeover was a savvy explosion of video, video-still, and photo collage that had some fun with the way we absorb and process pop culture, and online images in particular.
-
You can experience the immersive installation once more this Saturday, January 25, 2020.
-
The work, commissioned by the Nasher, broadcasts recorded testimonies, primarily from women describing the positive attributes of the sperm donor profiles they’re perusing from a sperm bank.
-
As we celebrate today's commemoration, Glasstire has compiled a list of artists who have honored Dr. King through their work.
-
His legacy will live in the artists and students he inspired, mentored, and befriended.
-
Works that are in the public domain may be used freely, without obtaining permission from or compensating a copyright owner.
-
Two exhibitions this season bring a new works by local artists to some still-fresh white-wall spaces.
-
In 2017, Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) featured the work of Ehren Tool, a war veteran who uses craft (and an attendant kind of art) as a therapeutic practice to deal with trauma.