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 |
By Sarah Fisch on April 12, 2011
Since I titled this post thusly, I sort of want to write the whole thing in ALL CAPS FOR EMPHASIS. But I won’t. Hello! I’m Sarah Fisch, a fresh out of the box Glasstire blogger. I’m obsessed with contemporary art, sharks, and Julie Andrews, I hate mayonnaise, I’m a born and bred San Antonian who [...]
Posted in Chupacabrona | Tagged austin, blogging, contemporary art, Glasstire, inferiority complex, Julie Andrews, majority-minority city, manifesto, Mexican culture, Plaza de Armas, rasquache, San Antonio, San Antonio art, San Antonio Current, Sarah Fisch, sharks, taqueria datapoint, Texas, Texas Monthly, the Alamo, the New School, the UNiversity of Texas at Austin, US demographic change, world's biggest cowboy boots |