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By GT contributors on September 6, 2012
Glasstire contributors offer up their picks for Fall 2012! AUSTIN Emily Roysdon: Pause Pose Discompose Visual Arts Center September 21 – December 8, 2012 Super smart curator and art historian Andy Campbell invited New York- and Stockholm-based artist Emily Roysdon to take over the VAC’s Vaulted Gallery for the fall semester. I first heard of Roysdon in [...]
Posted in Article, Feature, Uncategorized | Tagged a useful life, A Wrinkle In Time, aaron landsman, aaron parazette, amoa, Andy Campbell, Andy Coolquitt, animals, Ann Stautberg, Anne Wilkes Tucker, Annenberg Space for Photography, archetype, Architecture, art, Art Museum of Southeast Texas, arthouse, Artpace, austin, austin museum of art, BEAUMONT, ben lima, Benito Huerta, Beverly Penn, blaffer, box 13 artspace, Brooklyn Museum, bureaucracy, Burt Long, Canis Familiaris, Carter Ernst, Cathy Cunningham-Little, Charles Jones, Charmaine Locke, children, Chinati Weekend 2012, chris powell, claes oldenburg, Co-Lab, Co-Lab Projects, Colby Bird, collage, Colombia University, commercial images, Conduit Gallery, contemporary, coosje van bruggen, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Corinne Jones, Cornelia Parker, cosmopolitanism, culture, dallas, DB12: Volume 2, denison university, Día de los Muertos, diverseworks, DIY, Documentary, East Texas, Ed Hill, el paso museum of art, El Paso Public Library, Elizabeth Akamatsu, Emily Roysdon, erika osborne, Eugene Binder Gallery, Eva Rothschild, exhibition, Federico Veiroj, film, Fl!ght gallery, fort worth, Fort Worth Contemporary Arts, found objects, Frank Tolbert, FringeNYC, front gallery, glassblowing, Global Lens, Gregg Bordowitz, hair, Harris Lieberman Gallery, Harry Geffert, Hilary Harnischfeger, House Lamps, Houston, installation, james surls, janeil engelstad, Janet Chaffee, Jeffers Theatre, Jerolyn & Roger Colombik, jesus moroles, Joan Batson, joe rosenthal, john wilcox, Judy Rushin, Julie Bozzi, Justin Parr, Ken Little, kia neill, Kris Pierce, Kristin Gamez, Lawndale, Lesbians to the Rescue, Letitia & Sedrick Huckaby, Liam Gillick, Linda Ridgway, Liza & Lee Littlefield, local government, LTTR, Manuel Carrillo, Marfa, mari hernandez, Marianne Green, Mario Ybarra Jr., mark cole, Mark McDaniel, Martha Rosler, más rudas collective, Más Triste San Antonio, menil, menil drawing institute, mexic-arte, mfah, michelle white, mitchell center, Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, modernism, modular design, Mona Hatoum, Moody Gallery, multimedia, multimedia storytelling, museum of fine arts, Nasher Sculpture Center, natalie zelt, New York International Fringe Festival, nut milk, NYIFF, off-the-grid, Otis Jones, painting, panhandle, Paul Kittelson, paul strand, performance art, Photographic Society of America, photography, piero fenci, pop art, public action, Randy Twaddle, Rebecca Drolen, Renzo Piano, richard wentworth, rio grande valley, robert kinmont, Ruth Leonela Buentello, San Antonio, Sarah Castillo, sauerkraut, Shannon & William Cannings, Sharon Engelstein, Sightings, silkscreen, Slanguage, sol lewitt, south texas underground film, SRO Photo Gallery, Stephen Lapthisophon, Susan Budge, sustainable farming, Suzanne Bloom, technology, terri thornton, Terry & Jo Harvey Allen, Texas, Texas State University Galleries, texas tech, The Dallas Bienniel, The Guadalupe Cultural Arts Center, the Menil Collection, The Reading Room, The Sleepy Border Town Insomniacs, Tommy White, TRR, Unit B, university of georgia, university of texas pan american, UT Arlington, UTPA, VAC, Vernon Fisher, Vincent Falsetta, virtual, Visual Arts Center, Waiting for Godot, war, whole foods, will michels, William Campbell Contemporary, window works, women, women & their work, worm farm |
By Betsy Lewis on April 25, 2012
I tried X once; HARAKIRI is a lot like that but without the uncontrollable want of sex (okay, twice). The opening night of HARAKIRI was the first in a series of consecutive Saturday nights featuring two hours of simultaneous performances, its theoretical pillar being hara-kiri, a Japanese ritual suicide requiring eyewitnesses (a definition simplified for [...]
Posted in Blog, Don't Look. Okay Look., Uncategorized | Tagged centraltrak, Danielle Georgiou, DGDG, George Quartz, HARAKIRI, Jill Foltz, performance art, Tabitha Pease |
By Sarah Fisch on July 2, 2011
Performance art. Performance art made by an avowed and politically-engaged feminist. A feminist who is a new mom to a 5 month old daughter. Who (the new mom) went to U. Penn, and completed a residency in Scandinavia last year. Performance art about gender/frontera issues, sex work and South Texas sexual colonialism. With guitar and [...]
Posted in Chupacabrona | Tagged Blue Star Contemporary Art Center, Boys Town, Boystown, buttercup, contemporary art San Antonio, Donkey Show, Duran Duran, erik sanden, first Thursday, julia barbosa-landois, la frontera, Nuevo Laredo, performance art, prostitution, Rio, Rio Grande, San Antonio music, sex work, Texas-Mexico border, video art |
By Bill Davenport on June 28, 2011
Renowned performance artist Nick Cave (not the renowned Australian alt-rocker), will be artist-in-residence at the University of North Texas Institute for the Advancement of the Arts in the 2011-2012. Cave, who went to UNT in the 80′s, will visit twice in the fall and twice in the spring, and has been commissioned to create a [...]
Posted in Newswire | Tagged alvin ailey cave, nick cave, performance art, sound suits, unt, unt nick cave |