Saturday, May 9, 2009
Friday, May 8, 2009
DDDDDDAAAAbooCHERY
This Friday night!
DDDDDDAAAAbooCH
9pm, $7 at the gate, 21+ (no exceptions),
Southern Star kegz, dollar shots,the usual.
all you can drinks.........
good times....even better friends....
Your $7 will go to help fund , BooTown, and the HOuston Fringe Festival.
Boo Town: www.
Thursday, May 7, 2009
2009 Houston Art Car Weekend Schedule
2009 Houston Art Car Weekend Schedule
Friday, May 8
· Main Street Drag, 7 a.m. at the Houston Zoo, 1513 N MacGregor Dr.
Join us for the official start of Art Car Weekend as caravans of Art Cars visit more than 20,000 people who otherwise may not be able to experience the Saturday Parade. The caravans stop at children’s hospitals, schools and community centers to spread smiles and the creative spirit with more than 80 Art Cars participating. The Main Street Drag begins and ends at the Houston Zoo.
· Sneak Peek at Discovery Green sponsored by Opportunity Houston
7 -10 p.m. at Discovery Green, 1500 McKinney Street
Sneak Peek will feature live music and entertainment throughout the park. On the main stage, noted Art Car filmmaker Harrod Blank will screen his latest work. Graffiti artists will use car hoods as canvas in a colorful demonstration. As the sun goes down, the park will become filled with illuminated Art Cars outfitted with special night lighting. Houston’s own Sideshow Tramps will take the stage for a free concert guaranteed to get the crowd moving.
Saturday, May 9
· The VIPit Party, 11 a.m. at the Heritage Society, 1100 Bagby
The official party of the Houston Art Car Parade offers the absolute best views and features a deluxe picnic lunch from some of Houston’s best restaurants, shaded bleacher seating, gift bags and fun family activities. In addition, there will be a kid’s art workshop sponsored by City Art Works, live DJs and Parade Commentary. The party is destined to sell out so advance purchase is encouraged.
· Tickets can be purchased by calling 713-926-6368.
Complimentary parking is located at 401 W. Dallas. The VIPit Party is wheelchair and stroller accessible. Proceeds go to the Orange Show Center for Visionary Art to defray Art Car Weekend expenses, guaranteeing that the parade stays a FREE gift to the City of Houston.
· 22nd Annual Houston Art Car Parade, Starts at 1 p.m. along Allen Parkway
Watch as more than 250 rolling works of art turn concrete into a colorful canvas to celebrate the artist in everyone! The mobile masterpieces will motor down Allen Parkway in the world’s oldest and largest Art Car Parade, the Houston Art Car Parade. The Parade begins at Allen Parkway and Taft and ends at Montrose after looping around the Heritage Society. Plenty of viewing space is available along Allen Parkway between Taft and Bagby.
New features are added to the Parade every year. Here are some exciting additions for 2009:
· The Starting Line located at Taft Street and Allen Parkway, is where the party revs up as the Art Cars get in gear. Live music, DJs and parade commentary add to the festive atmosphere. Parade goers can grab a drink at the Bud Light Beer Garden and grab a seat for prime parade viewing on bleachers provided by sponsors.
· Capital One Bank Kid Zone (Allen Parkway at Sabine Street) is a place where families can watch the Parade, participate in activities such as making miniature Art Cars and have a chance for kids to paint on an actual Art Car or pet animals brought to the parade by the Houston Zoo! The Kid Zone also will feature family friendly entertainment as well as bleacher seating for parade viewing. Vending and restrooms will be located nearby.
(Guests wishing to attend the Kid Zone are encouraged to park downtown in the Theater District parking lots and walk west along Allen Parkway from Bagby Street).
· South Padre Island Sand Box where kids and adults alike can participate in a giant sandcastle extravaganza. Located in Eleanor Tinsley Park.
Sunday, May 10
Art Car Awards Ceremony & Brunch
11 a.m. - 2 p.m. at The Orange Show – 2402 Munger Street
The last blast of the weekend takes place at The Orange Show monument (2402 Munger Street) on Sunday, May 10, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Art Car Awards Ceremony and Brunch will feature live music and entertainment, food and drink, and artists selling their creations. This year’s winners will be announced at the awards ceremony with more than $10,000 in cash and prizes going to the best Art Car creations in 14 categories. This free event is open to the public.
Weekender
There's a lot going on!
McClain Gallery
Thursday, May 7, 6:30 - 8:30 pm
Nature Perceived, Nature Conceived
Williams Tower
Thursday, May 7, 6-8 pm
7 pm
Susan Stockwell, Hagit Barkai and Tala Vahabzadeh
Art League Houston
Friday, May 8, 6:00-8:00 pm
El Franco Lee II, Kevin Curry, Amber Eagle, Bob Sennhauser, Stephanie Martz, and Noah Simblist
Lawndale Art Center
Friday, May 8, 6:30-8:30 pm
No Zoning: Artists Engage Houston
Contemporary Arts Museum
Friday, May 8, 7-10 pm
View SISYPHUS OFFICE in a larger map
Sisyphus Office
Friday, May 8
4-6 pm at the Houston Decorative Center (5120 Woodway Suite 3029)
6-8 pm at Skydive, Nea House of Beauty, Copy.com, the Aurora Picture Show office, KPFT 90.1, and Caroline Collective
Lowell Boyers
Deborah Colton Gallery
Saturday, May 9, 6-9 pm
how casual are your encounters? by Tom Ho for more click HERE
Dirty Jeff, Derek Albeck, French, Give Up, Patrick Griffin, Will Boone
Saturday, May 9, 7-9 pm
Amy Blakemore
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Sunday, May 10
Things n' Stuff
Paul Slocum and his mad machines rock, but he's going to leave Tejas for colder pastures. RIP his baby and/or Gallery in Dallas, maybe the only thing in Dallas worth living for. Dallas artist should now move to New York or lie down on the freeway. It's the only way.
Apparently curators and gallerists are jumping at the chance to get their hands on Cuban art; "There has been this pent-up interest. Cuba is in the news. The interest is there," says Ben Rodriguez-Cubenas.
Bored? Click on Houston repeatedly HERE. It's a time killer.
There was an Art Car Memorial for Tom Kennedy in San Francisco last Friday, and the Art Car Parade here Saturday will most likely carry some of the same mourning.
Kobe is a total douche.
Creative Time, who were recently at the Glassell for a program, is criss-crossing the country looking for "experimental geography". Pretty cool.
Response to a Form Letter
them:
Dear Shawn Morrisey:
I am an artist and assistant curator writing on behalf of Culturehall, a relatively new arts website launched in June, in respect to your blog, “B.S. Houst Art Blog.” I’ve been enjoying your posts and found some similarities in our interests in contemporary art. Culturehall is based in New York City, and we are seeking to expand our inclusion of artists as well as our relationships with national and international arts sites.
Culturehall was founded by artist, David Andrew Frey, to promote emerging and established artists by creating an on-line community and curated space for contemporary work. Our community of artists is primarily composed of MFAs, art faculty and other art professionals. While a majority of our members are invited, we do also accept applications for review.
Please visit our site at: www. culturehall. com
We would be interested in exchanging links with you and fostering some dialogue with your site. David Andrew Frey is also available for interviews or more information.
Best,
Tema Stauffer
Tema Stauffer
Assistant Curator
http://culturehall.com/tema_stauffer
+1 (917) 683.2671
4821 5th Street, Suite 4I, New York, NY 11101, USA
me:
Fuck New York.
WTF?!? Have you seen the show at the Station?
Javiere De Villota, Dehumanization Echo, 2009
brutal
The Station Museum
Alabama and La Branch.
Open Wed – Sun, 11am – 6pm.
Admission is always free.
Wednesday, May 6, 2009
Screwston Squeeze
Don't forget...
In conjunction with Texas Folklife, Project Row Houses will be doing a screening of The Big Squeeze. The movie will be followed by performances by international Zydeco sensation Step Rideaux and 2008 Big Squeeze Winner (and Houstonian) John Ramirez.
Doors open at 6:30p.m. and the movie begins at 6:45p.m.
2310 Elgin (@ Dowling) at the historic Eldorado Ballroom
Free and open to the public
For more information, check out the Project Row Houses Facebook event or go to www.projectrowhouses.org
That's Just the Way Things Go
Kelly Bennett, the master preparator at Blaffer Gallery, has flown the coop to Buffalo; this appeared shortly after she packed up the van and drove north. Any takers?
Museum Preparator at Blaffer Gallery
Blaffer Gallery, the Art Museum of the University of Houston, is seeking a qualified individual for the position of Museum Preparator to coordinate the fabrication, installation and disassembly of art exhibitions.
Specific job duties:
1. Prepares, hangs, installs and de-installs works of art utilizing proper handling and security techniques.
2. Selects, schedules and supervises installation crew for exhibition installations, packing and unpacking of loans, and special projects.
3. Oversees the painting and construction of pedestals, vitrines, fixtures and other finished structures for the display of works of art.
4. Collaborates with exhibition curators on the design and construction of special exhibit effects and temporary partitions.
5. Implements procedures for installation of works of art to ensure installations meet safety requirements.
6. Reviews upcoming projects to determine materials and services required; produces work schedules.
7. Coordinates the care, maintenance and storage of the collection.
8. Coordinates the scheduling of ongoing maintenance for galleries, and ensures that gallery spaces are well maintained and presentable to the public.
9. Performs other job-related duties as assigned.
Minimum Qualifications: Requires a 4 year degree. The ideal candidate will have previous experience in museum installation arrangement.
To apply, please visit the UH employment website at https://jobs.uh.edu; posting # 064231
The University of Houston is an Affirmative Action/Equal Employment Opportunity institution. Minorities, women, veterans and persons with disabilities are encouraged to apply.
Position open until filled. Blaffer Gallery
The Art Museum of the University of Houston
120 Fine Arts Building
Houston, TX 77204-4018
Monday, May 4, 2009
¿Tiene Algos Preguntas?
Missile Dick Chicks
Mayoral Candidates face the [art]Public
Peter Brown
Gene Locke
Roy Morales
Annise Parker
Tonight, Monday, May 4
6:30 p.m. — 8:00 p.m.
Museum of Fine Arts, Houston
Brown Auditorium, 1001 Bissonnet
Open to the public. Free. No RSVP required.
Hunting Prize Won by Internationally Renown Artist, Hunting PLC thinks she's a Housewife from Kingwood
I would like to ask- do you think O'Neil's winning entry violates the Hunting Prize's banality inducing criteria to not "use bodily fluids, degradation of religion or government, and/or depiction of sexual acts or any... topic objectionable to Hunting PLC"? Isn't it a not-so-thinly-veiled criticism of society and government?
Every Way but the Right Way
It’s a mess out there, and nothing demonstrates the relentless and grinding change and upheaval in Houston every few years than the fate of the Human Tour.
Every Way but the Right Way
No Zoning: Artists Engage Houston
Opening Friday, May 8, 7–10 pm
On view May 9 through October 4, 2009
Dan Havel and Dean Ruck, Give and Take, 2009
pic by Chuy Benitez
Land Art in an urban setting, Michael Galbreth’s Human Tour, 1987, mapped the inner city of Houston, marking limbs with bronze plaques from Frost Town in the 5th Ward through downtown south to the Astrodome. His attempted anthropomorphization of the city streets was an attempt to reach the public in a new way. At first the dozens of markers spelled a clear path through the city’s core, but the city’s relentless growth has overgrown the map drawn onto it. Streets have changed; plaques were removed by construction workers and vandals. A few markers remain, giving curious pedestrians strange proclamations, like “You Are at the Right Hand of The City” along with directions to seek Human Tour maps at your local library. Today Galbreth’s project is a relic, a ruin only two decades after its creation.
A member of The Art Guys, Galbreth came to Houston from Tennessee. Open to the laissez-faire culture and open source urban planning dominated by developers with enough money to grease the wheels, he came to treat the glorified bayou of Houston as a landscape to by pushed and prodded, legally or illegally. Free from the zoning ordinances that shape other large American cities by separating residential, commercial, and industrial areas, Houston allows an approach where bizarre juxtapositions of architecture and sweeping concrete and steel overpasses multiply every year. In this chaotic urbanity, many Houston artists have been able to take to the streets, abandoned and unused lots and their own properties to transform banality into sustainable creativity. No Zoning: Artists Engage Houston considers the efforts of diverse artists working in this unique environment to grow mutated vines in the concrete soil of this toxic town.
Project Row Houses
Participants include The Art Guys, who will marry a tree; Mary Ellen Carroll, who is reconfiguring an abandoned tract house in Sharpstown; and Rick Lowe, founder of Project Row Houses, who will celebrate residents of the Third Ward in billboards. Also included is work by curator and artist Bill Davenport, Houston Chronicle muckraker photographer Ben Tecumseh DeSoto, sculptor Sharon Engelstein, outsider artist Cleveland Turner, aka The Flower Man, The Fundred Dollar Bill Project by Mel Chin, Andrea Grover, collaborators Dan Havel and Dean Ruck, photographer and art car documenter George Hixson, CORE member Lauren Kelley, graffiti crew Knitta Please, Eric Leshinsky, Lee Littlefield, avid boaters and bikers Benjy Mason and Zach Moser, Notsuoh proprietor and performance artist Jim Pirtle and utopian designer Nestor Topchy.
The catalogue for No Zoning will include examples and documentation of city interventions and visionary structures from the punk rock days of the budding art car movement and the Lawndale Annex in the 1980s, 90s experimental art spaces like CSAW, Templo, Sharon Engelstein’s mini-gallery and The Artery as well as current alternative spaces like Bill’s Junk, Westheimer Block Party, The Aurora Picture Show and The Flower Man’s house. The exhibition will incorporate performances, lectures and video screenings during the museum's extended Thursday evening hours to enliven the exhibition throughout its run. Throughout the city, the CAMH will sponsor educational, historical and artistic events—seriously, this is a call to anyone who’s been to those parties in underground warehouses, Montrose bungalows, parks, streets and festivals—you’re the blood that makes this artworld flow.