By Bill Davenport on December 11, 2012
The 5th Texas Biennial, taking place at multiple venues across the state September 5- November 9, 2013, has chosen a long list of curators: Bill Arning Director, Contemporary Arts Museum Houston René Paul Barilleaux Chief Curator/Curator of Art after 1945, McNay Art Museum, San Antonio Christian Gerstheimer Curator, El Paso Museum of Art K8 Hardy [...]
Posted in Newswire | Tagged Bard College, Bill Arning Director, Claremont Graduate University, College of Visual Arts and Design, Contemporary Arts Museum Houston René Paul Barilleaux Chief Curator/Curator of Art after 1945, Dallas Clint Willour Curator, Dallas Jeremy Strick Director, Denton David Pagel Art critic and Associate Professor, El Paso Museum of Art K8 Hardy Artist, Fort Worth Dario Robleto Artist, galveston arts center, Houston Noah Simblist Associate Professor of Art, Los Angeles Bárbara Perea Independent curator, McNay Art Museum, Meadows School of the Arts, Mexico City Christina Rees Curator of the Galleries, Nasher Sculpture Center, New York and University of Texas at Austin Annette Lawrence Artist and Professor, New York Teresa Hubbard / Alexander Birchler Artists and Faculty, San Antonio Christian Gerstheimer Curator, Southern Methodist University, Texas Biennial, Texas Christian University, university of north texas, Virginia Rutledge |
By Rainey Knudson on May 27, 2011
The fantasy goes something like this: Most everyone was pleased with the clear, focused vision for the 2011 Texas Biennial. It was a brilliant success, with a tightly curated, single exhibition put together by a well-known curator from out of state. The show itself was held in a great institution in a city other than Austin, [...]
Posted in Article, Feature | Tagged arthouse, austin art, camh, Cowboys Stadium, fort worth modern, james magee, mary ellen carroll, mcnay, rainey knudson, Sarah Fisch, Texas Biennial, texas prize, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Virginia Rutledge |
By Sarah Fisch on May 14, 2011
You still have time to see the Texas Biennial 2011! It’s up until May 21, extended by a week. At least the main exhibition — curated by Virgina Rutledge, copyright attorney/art historian/former special counsel to Creative Commons — is still up in this large office building at 816 Congress. I think this is sort of [...]
Posted in Review | Tagged 816 Congress, austin art, Being John Malkovich, border issues, Caravaggio, Catherine Colangelo, cumbia, drug cartels, drug wars, Goya, Hieronymous Bosch, Jessica Mallios, Kathryn Kelley, Katy Horan, Marcelyn McNeil, Michael Anthony García, nautical art, Rembrandt, Ricardo Paniagua, Richard Martinez, Rigoberto A. Gonzales, San Antonio art, Sarah Fisch, soft sculpture, Tejano culture, texas painting, texas video art, TX Biennial 2011, Virginia Rutledge |