Showing posts with label art. Show all posts
Showing posts with label art. Show all posts

Monday, October 14, 2013

Columbuz on Banks

Why, no offishur, I haven't been drinking at Ernie's.  That wuz some other tall, bronze Italian.  He went thatta way!



This Christopher Columbus was sculpted by Joe Incrapera in 1992, commemorating the 500th anniversary of Columbus's discovery of the New World.  You remember the childhood saying, right:  in fourteen-hundred-ninety-two, Columbus sailed the ocean blue?  The statue graces Bell Park, in Montrose--right across the street from the bar Ernie's on Banks.

Fairly unassuming, right?  Wrong!

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

Seventh Place to Go in 2013

Where's the seventh place to go in 2013?  No, the answer is not Hell, but if you come in August you may think it is.



Houston is number seven on the New York Times's The 46 Places to Go in 2013.  "What's big in Texas?" asks the Times.  Why, culture and food, of course. 

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

For Sale: Houses, First Ward



Bike trail to the Heights, seen twice--once with a camera.  September 3, 2012.
One reads:


Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Blessed be those who recycle.

Old Sixth Ward wanderings, March 2012.


MECA, 1900 Kane, in the old Dow School, Sixth Ward.  Built in 1912 and listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the school is currently undergoing restoration through MECA’s Dow School Rehabilitation Project; Phase I exterior restoration was completed in 2010.


La Virgen de las Cans.



Thursday, November 22, 2012

Tolerance



"Tolerance" by Jaume Plensa, 2011.
Seven statues, each ten feet high, made of metal alphabet, seated along Buffalo Bayou.  Above, taken March 4, 2012 on a bicycle adventure.


Sunday, November 18, 2012

Your move. No, after you, I insist.



"Mirror" by Jaume Plensa, 2011 at Rice University, Central Quad.  Comprised of the letters from eight alphabets, Chinese, Latin, Russian, Arabic, Greek, Japanese, Hindi, Hebrew.  Gift of Bill and Stephanie Sick.  Photo taken February 2012.


Wednesday, November 14, 2012

Where the rooster crows, there is a village.



Circle of Animals, by Ai Weiwei.  10-foot tall, 1000 pound Chinese Zodiac heads, Hermann Park, March 2012.

So sayeth the chronicle.  Check out the artist here and here. Ai Weiwei is a prolific artist and ballsy social activist in China.


Houston was one of eleven locations world-wide to display this exhibit. Circle of Animals/Zodiac Heads is a recreation (on a grand scale) of Chinese zodiac sculptures that were once part of a remarkable fountain at the Yuanming Yuan palace outside Beijing in the 1700s.  The heads of the fountain sculptures spouted water to mark the time.  In 1860, British and French troops raided the palace and looted it.  To date, only seven of the original heads have surfaced.








Which sign are you?

Friday, November 9, 2012

Crafty much?


There's a pocket park, just behind Main and nearby the long ribbon of concrete that's the Southwest Free-for-All.  Belonging to the Houston Center for Contemporary Crafts, the Craft Garden started in 2003 as a collaboration among artists and gardeners.  Divided into sections for plants to make baskets, textiles, dyes, and papers, it's part and parcel of the craft process. After a drought year and a subsequent hot summer, it's not looking too bad.   Plus, the fountain, shade, and deck are a welcome respite in any slog between Med Center/Hermann Park and Downtown. 


Craft Garden
Wearing greenery befitting a less-arid summer.
It's free to visit here.  Rosedale at Travis, in the Museum District.