Friday, June 6, 2008

Westheimer: The Backbone of Houston


Running from the Eastwood neighborhood at the east, through the city center and past three major loops of freeways, Westheimer Road is the most likely street you will end up on in Houston, hands down.


Dizzee Rascal and UGK in the 3rd Ward

The city’s five major universities are located adjacent to Westheimer, beginning in the 3rd Ward neighborhood where it is named Elgin Street. University of Houston and Texas Southern University are clustered in the historically black neighborhood south of downtown. Further west is the HCC campus in Midtown, where the street name changes from Elgin to Westheimer Road. Six blocks south of Westheimer at Montrose is Saint Thomas University, and further south in the Museum District is the beautiful Rice University campus.


Shopping along Westheimer ranks among the best in the city. Traveling west of downtown, small boutiques and antique shops mix with coffee houses and art galleries in the Montrose neighborhood. The Bookstop store on Shepherd Street is the oldest theatre in the county. The posh Upper Kirby District provides natural food grocery stores and upscale shopping centers as well as delicious Tex-Mex and fusion restaurants. The Greenway Plaza area is replete with strip malls and innovative fast food, but the best reason to go is the Edwards Theatre, the best place to catch a movie in town.




To the west of Loop 610 is the Galleria, name of both a cluster of four shopping malls and one of the fastest growing neighborhoods in Houston. The Galleria Mall houses 375 stores in 1.2 million square feet of air conditioned space. It is located at one of the busiest surface street intersections in the country, Post Oak Boulevard at Westheimer Road. The Galleria neighborhood between Loop 610 and Beltway 8 is a mishmash of residential, commercial and industrial neighborhoods, a product of Houston’s lack of zoning laws. The entire length of Westheimer along this portion of the city is packed with big box stores, strip malls and restaurants. There is something for any taste, and the delectable food of cultures from the world over. Just south of Westheimer is the Richmond Strip, packed with clubs and bars. It is a major spot for car culture and flashy behavior.



Wednesday, June 4, 2008

Houston: A Primer (The Big Stuff is in the Little Stuff)


It is possible to begin a description of this Southern burg with the statistics, like Houston’s metropolitan area of 5.5 million residents or the 90 languages spoken here, but that won’t really let you know anything about the Bayou City.

You could go in the other direction and mention famous Houston residents, including George H.W. Bush (not his son), George Foreman, Roger Clemens, Beyonce, Joel Olsteen, and Chamillionaire, but the greatest thing about the city is its people.


A place where everyone you meet is a fine blend of Southern manners, Texas pride and American vigor. Here food and friends dominate daily life so much that there are more restaurants per capita than any other city in the United States. Houston is one of the greenest cities in America, with gracefully knotted Live Oak trees dominating the streets in older neighborhoods and large parks that are only one step away from a bayou jungle.


In March you can expect the temperature to peak at 75 or 80. The climate is temperate and spring is the driest time of year. Sunny days are frequent, and Houstonians enjoy taking advantage of recreation in city parks, museums, golf courses, lakes and the beach in Galveston. During the summer the temperature can reach 106 degrees with 100% humidity and frequent rain coming off the coast.

The climate of Houston is what separates the city’s culture from the rest of Texas. More akin to Louisiana and the coastal regions of Mississippi and Alabama, Houston has inherited the Southern predilection for relaxation in the face of overwhelming Mother Nature. A major influence on the music and art of Houston, the city’s particular cultural crosshairs have brought about the invention of Zydeco music by Clifton Chenier, the international success of ZZ Top and Screw, a particular genre of rap created by DJ Screw which typically involves the radical slowing down and “chopping” of other artists’ songs.

Early Texas settlers were Mexican and Spanish, followed by German and Czech families. Though they had lay claim to all of the area between the Red River and the Rio Grande, the first to settle in the swamp just north of the indigenous Karankawa were the brothers John and Augustus Allen from New York City. They engineered the founding of the city and made a shrew political move by naming it after the sitting President of Texas. Over the last two centuries the city has grown with wave after wave of immigrants. Today the city is a tapestry of cultural heritage woven around massive freeways that define the geography of the flat landscape.

Friday, May 30, 2008

Oh great, more original political art @ the station



how "cutting edge" for James Harithas :P.. i'm sure we'll hear really new and revolutionary things like.. how the white man is evil, how color equals oppression, reparations, and other pop culture anthems of dissent! available now!

http://www.stationmuseum.com/

THE BIG SHOW 2008


THE BIG SHOW | 2008 Call for Entries

O'Quinn, Mezzanine & Cavnar Galleries

"Ladies and Gentlemen, this is your first official announcement for Lawndale's biggest show of the year: THE BIG SHOW! Artists living within 100 miles of Houston are invited to submit their artwork for a chance to be included in the show and a shot at one of three cash prizes."

Submissions, hand deliver work to Lawndale Art Center
June 25 and 26, 2008 - from 10 am to 5 pm

Pick-Up (for works not selected)
June 29 and 30

Opening Reception and Announcement of Awards
Friday, July 11 from 6:30pm to 8:30pm

2008 Big Show Juror
Aram Moshayedi
Curator, LA>

sometimes not just Houston



I would like to invite you to my Exhibit Opening Reception, Los Hibridos, on Friday, May 30, 2008. The reception will be held at the Museo Historico de Reynosa at 8:00pm. Curator: Artemio Guerra, Creador Emérito de Tamaulipas, México. I have attached a map for directions. Also, if you have any questions, please feel free to call me at (956) 655-6850 or the museum at (011) 52-899-9221512. Thank you, Marina I. Salinas **It is a very safe part of town, so you do not have to worry about safety** Les invito a que me acompañen a mi exhibición el Viernes 30 de mayo del 2008 en el Museo Histórico de Reynosa a las 20:00 hrs. Les anexo el mapa y la invitacion. Cualquier duda o pregunta, favor de llamarme al (956) 655-6850 o al museo (011) 52-899-9221512. Gracias Marina I. Ceballos de Salinas


Something Music Related

Geez, what's the deal with nothing being posted here? I was looking forward to coming back and reading posts. Oh well... I want to feature music a little more in this blog. Here's a start, albeit unspectacular... Maybe something more in depth on a regular basis upcoming:




Dertybird to play Last Concert Cafe Friday May 30th!

Body:
Dertybird is set to take the stage at last concert cafe (houston TX) on may 30th. Also performing is David Jiminez and Nice Work If You Can Get It.
Don't miss this epic rock show!

http://www.myspace.com/dertybirdrocks





Photobucket - Video and Image Hosting


Sunday, May 25, 2008

Helicopters are Fascinating



There is a history of dumping news on the Memorial Day weekend, so it gets buried in the day-to-day muck of life. I stopped writing online when I felt that there was no use in continuing postmodern sophism through art criticism and Peoplelisation of Houston. I still had three obligations to fulfil while I was not writing here, and they were all obsessed with the spectre of May 1968. The three pieces were torture, and I hope I never write again.

The last piece I wrote before May was a hopeful take on technological communication and intimacy refuting Baudrillard's simulacra. Postmodernism can suck my fucking balls- it's some bullshit.

Then it was International Workers' Day, or in Texan- Thursday. I quit smoking. May 68 had been in the air, but it hit full force nostalgia with a masturbatory May Artforum and the real revelation for someone born in 1980 that the game that is being played in art and commerce is not viable, original or revolutionary. I have been so fucking depressed.

Have you ever read A Season in Hell? Don't read it if you are depressed. YAR asked me to write 3000 words for Gulf Coast, a literary mag, about his illustrations of the epic poem written by a seventeen year old. The other Parisian revolutions came into focus, but postmodernism fell apart for me. Rimbaud believed what he wrote. It was happening to him. Is that so stupid to say?

I rewrote that thing a million times. I took to watching Italian soccer games and writing on top of copies of the last revisions. I went to the Art Car party at the Orange Show. I saw the Houston Area Show, The Old Weird America at the CAMH, John Alexander at the MFAH, the Lawndale, and Diverseworks. I heard about Tom Jones' death while walking out of the new baroque cathedral in downtown. On the day that Robert Rauschenberg died I bought daisies and drove to the memorial on Heights Boulevard in the rain. I watched Chicago Cubs games and rewrote it again and again. I sent it away and I was in shambles. For Artshouston, I wrote about How Artists Draw at the Menil. Omar from the Free Press called and said he was going to Lebanon. He needed an article. I had nothing left but three obituaries in 500 words.

May 1968 is a funny thing to me now. it is stupid only because it is local- and I am elsewhere. There is something to be said for stepping away from rancor to do something productive. Postmodern market art, in all its facets and forms, is a restriction on life. This is stupid to think that there isn't real life and magic in objecthood. Otherwise we say that life and living it is not art itself. Systematic science is defined by human subjectivity. Look to youth to redefine art as a rich man's game that artists do not need.

Instead of fighting against the system, like William Cordova, I am content to get a job. Academic sophism is a lucrative business. Maybe I'll be an administrator. What Houston needs now is a market day, a public identity. Screw it, I'm moving to the northside.


There has been a lot of ink spilled regarding 1968 and where we are today. Don't forget 1948 either. The Old Left has no place today. Communism failed, but I really don't like the world they have created along with the right. Truly trainspotting, I am obsessed with politics now.

A quiet summer to you all. Let's grow a little.

Saturday, May 24, 2008

Latest Houston Literary / Art Mag



NANO Fiction is a non-profit literary journal run entirely by undergraduate students at the University of Houston. And this time it's in COLOR! Which means it looks really great and was way more expensive to make! SO... buy the latest issue and help these kids break even! Visit: http://nanofiction.org/order.html

And add Vol 2 #1 to your cart!

Get your music on at the MFAH

Starbucks Mixed Media Music Series
May 24, 2008, 8:00 PM - 12:01 AM


performing live:

Voxtrot
Austin TX / Beggars Group USA / www.voxtrot.net

Car Stereo (Wars)
Austin TX / www.myspace.com/carstereowars

The Mathletes
Houston TX / www.myspace.com/themathletes

Skull Gang Disco
featuring djs:
Bad Knives, PRKL8R + Juan the Terrible
www.myspace.com/avantdisco

Photo booth by Annie Ray

Emceed by Craig "BBC" Long and Karina Nistal
Special thanks to Guitar Center
Music Curated by Reprogram Music

Complimentary Starbucks beverages and cash bar at each event!

Admission:
$15 General Admission
$10 Students with ID
Free for Members
18 and up

Friday, May 23, 2008

ZINE FEST HOUSTON 2008!!!!































May 24, Noon to 9pm @The Secret Saturday Show Shady Tavern, 1206 W. 20th in the Heights. An exhibition of zines, comix, minicomics, diy, small press, underground art, and alternative media. Plus bands and djs presened by the Secret Saturday Show from noon to 5pm, followed by an auction to benefit Super Happy Fun Land. Hourly door prizes and more. noon- 9pm Zine Fest noon-2pm Secret Saturday djs 2pm- 5pm Secret Saturday bands 5pm-6pm Presentations by exhibitors 6pm-9pm SuperHappy Fun Land Art Auction Admission is free. Open to all ages (must be 21 or older to consume alcoholic beverages). Artists, zinesters, organizations, publishers and distros interested in setting up tables can contact shane@zinefesthouston.org for more information.

MYSPACE BEFRIEND THEM NOW!

"This is a Lie Berry"



Subscribe to these Houston Performance Artists! Spread it like the virus it is.

Saturday @ H Gallery



















SOLOMON KANE'S
Pyscho-Spirituality Under the Black Lights

Please join us for an art show by the Houston Press reader’s choice best artist of 2007 Mixing Psychedelic Art, Religious Philosophy, Mental Health Issues along with live music, free drinks, and live art models.

2D & 3D Metaphysical art that reacts in black light, white light, and no light.

"Better to sleep with a sober cannibal than a drunken Christian"*

"Sanity is a Cozy Lie."**

WITH LIVE MUSIC:

Dru Rey’s Art in Motion presents Dr. King Cobra and the Texas Dub Crusaders beginning at 8:00 pm.

9:30 pm Live Body Art Models provided by ABC Body Art.

Weird art, free drinks, beautiful models, and live Reggae music – What’s not to like? You would have to be crazy not to come.

Donations will be accepted for the adult and children’s volunteer services of the Harris County Psychiatric Center.

* - Herman Melville, author of "Moby Dick"

** - Susan Sontag


7PM

327 W. 19th St.
Houston, TX