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Tag: Visual Art

  • Anime and Fine Art Collide in “The House of Pikachu” – Houston Press

    Growing up, Owen Duffy says anime and different aspects of Japanese pop culture were integral to his childhood, from playing Final Fantasy to enjoying Dragon Ball Z. Though he sensed a moment of nostalgia, in surveying the landscape, he realized it was actually a sign of something more.

    “It feels like anime is more popular and more global now than it ever has been,” says Duffy, the Nancy C. Allen Curator and Director of Exhibitions at Asia Society Texas. “It’s no longer a niche interest or a cultural mainstay just in Japan. It’s something that’s really gone global.”

    On October 17, you can see how anime has evolved into an object of globalization and a serious subject for contemporary art when the museum opens “The House of Pikachu: Art, Anime, and Pop Culture.” The survey, spread across five galleries, features 25 artists from around the world, from Japan to Brazil, Mexico to Côte d’Ivoire, and, of course, right here in Texas.

    Anime’s global popularity, coupled with the fact that it’s been two decades since the first groundbreaking major exhibitions broadly introduced how Japanese pop culture and anime could become fertile territory for artistic experimentation, led Duffy to believe it’s time once again to revisit and update the conversation.

    “This exhibition,” Duffy notes, “represents another chapter in the history of cultural exchange between Asia and the rest of the world,” one that be traced back to when 19th-century Impressionists drew inspiration from imported Japanese woodblock prints. “It can be a way that a gateway to an introduction or cultural exchange, for cultural curiosity, for learning about the other.”

    Duffy found that there are many artists who “reinterpret anime through their art, use it as a reference, quote it as subject matter, make homages to it, and create their own worlds with its aesthetics,” and, given its impact, their work deserves a deeper look.

    “Just because something is part of mass culture doesn’t mean it shouldn’t be taken seriously,” he says. “Given its immense popularity, it needs to be taken even more seriously because of how much it means to people.”

    Julien Ceccaldi, A Collection of Little Memories, 2025. Acrylic on wall panels with metal stair. Credit: ©Julien Ceccaldi, Courtesy the artist and Jenny’s, New York and Gaga, Mexico City

    Among the 25 artists featured in the exhibition is Houston-based painter Gao Hang. Born in China, Gao grew up in a time when only a handful of Japanese animations were imported, yet when he moved to the U.S. in 2015, he found that those same shows had captivated his peers a world away.

    “When I talk to people around my age, my generation, we talk about the same things,” Gao says. “Though they had different names, we would pull out pictures on our phones and see we watched the same animations. There’s no culture shock. That’s amazing to me.”

    For “The House of Pikachu,” Gao is contributing two new paintings created specifically for the exhibit: the Ultraman-inspired Tokyo will always be fine and one featuring the exhibition’s namesake character.

    It was a challenge, Gao says, translating the famously two-dimensional Pikachu into his style, which he describes as “a little about space, a little about geometrical structures, and three dimensional.” But he calls the result – a blocky, fluorescently air-brushed Pikachu painted on a raw canvas – “a good experiment.”

    “When the subject is so popular, like Pikachu, I bring more of the painterly process, the painting quality, forward,” explains Gao.

    “That’s what’s brilliant about the Pikachu painting – the tension between dimensionality and flatness,” adds Duffy. “Flatness and stylization are such integral aspects to the style of anime, so, I think it is very funny and clever and thoughtful that Gao can play with the tensions between three-dimensional reality, digital reality, and also flatness in one painting.”

    Gao’s painting of Pikachu will be in the exhibit’s fourth gallery, which is the titular “house.” In the fourth gallery, visitors will see works from half a dozen artists who have all created different homages to the character by way of paintings, sculptures, photography, a mural, and clothing, created by fashion collective CFGNY.  

    “You’ll be overwhelmed by the amount of Pikachus,” says Duffy. “We hope it’ll allow you to consider all these different aspects: How the artist made it? What are the techniques that are going into it? What are their motivations? Because each one is going to be completely different.”

    A painting by Gao Hang.
    Gao Hang, Pikachu, 2025. Acrylic on canvas. Credit: ©Gao Hang, Courtesy the artist

    Gao relates the differences visitors will find among the Pikachus to a story about a professor who was once asked to define art. The professor instead asked his students to draw Mickey Mouse and bring in their creations the following day.

    “The professor put all the Mickey Mouses on one wall, and they all looked different. Then, the professor said, ‘This is art.’ Basically, art is all about how you interpret something, and then it’s all about the differences between people. You can see the differences in their composition, in their color choices and palettes, the lines that they draw, the size they choose, the energy they brought,” says Gao. “If every painting is about Pikachu, people will get over that really quickly and focus on the painting itself.”

    In the first gallery, visitors will find artists who have been consistently engaging with anime and Japanese pop culture, including a work from Yoshitaka Amano, one of the original animators of Speed Racer and a character designer for Final Fantasy. There’s also work by influential Japanese pop artist Keiichi Tanaami, who paved the way for artists like Takashi Murakami, and Rozeal., an African American woman who has been referencing anime and Japanese woodblock prints in her work for two decades.

    “This exhibition crosses generations,” Duffy says. “We’re really showing that this is something that transcends borders, age, and background.”

    Both Duffy and Gao see “The House of Pikachu” a record of how global culture evolves.

    “After 50 years, 100 years, this will be Asian culture, and Japanese culture, to our generation,” says Gao. “So, it’s a nice show to have in the history book of painting.”

    The House of Pikachu: Art, Anime, and Pop Culture runs from October 17 through March 15, 2026, at Asia Society Texas, 1370 Southmore. For more information, call 713-496-9901 or asiasociety.org/texas. $8; free for ages 6 and under, students with I.D., and Asia Society Texas, and free on Thursdays.

    Natalie de la Garza

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  • JEEVE Unveils “Spoken for – the Movie”: A 12-Part AI Visual Album

    After decades shaping hits for artists including Carlos Santana, Tupac, Britney Spears, Kat Graham, Todrick Hall, Nicole Scherzinger, Beto Cuevas, La Ley, Luis Fonsi, David Bisbal (Spain), M. Pokora (France), Pixie Lott, and James Arthur (UK), Grammy-winning producer Jeeve steps into the spotlight with a kaleidoscopic visual journey through trauma, identity, and liberation.

    Jean-Yves “Jeeve” Ducornet, Founder of Crystal Ship Music, has been the creative force behind some of music’s most iconic voices for more than 35 years. A Grammy-winning producer, he has shaped records for Carlos Santana, Tupac, Britney Spears, Kat Graham, Todrick Hall, Nicole Scherzinger, Beto Cuevas, La Ley, Luis Fonsi, David Bisbal, Pixie Lott, James Arthur, and many others. His fingerprints are on platinum records and global hits – but with his new project, Spoken For – The Movie, Jeeve finally steps into the spotlight as the artist himself.

    A Cinematic Album Experience

    Two years in the making, Spoken For – The Movie is more than an album. It’s a 12-part visual odyssey – each track paired with its own AI-driven short film. Blending music, cinema, and generative art, the project traces a journey through inherited trauma, creative struggle, fleeting love, and ultimate rebirth.

    Videos from Spoken For – The Movie have already earned honors at film festivals such as Chicago Filmmaker Awards, Video Musika, Mannheim Arts and Film Festival, San Diego Movie Awards, and many more.

    “Our insecurities can be more cinematic than a blockbuster,” Jeeve says. “I wanted to create something that feels part therapy, part prophecy – and completely my own.”

    Highlights from Spoken For-The Movie

    “Why Do I” – A raw opening track confronting generational trauma and emotional paralysis, setting the tone for the journey ahead.

    “That Thing That Makes You Win” – A biting satire of the music industry’s con artists, staged as an 1800s carnival where charisma outshines talent.

    “Good As Perfect” – A wedding song stripped of fantasy, embracing flaws and friction as the true foundation of lasting love.

    The title track, “Spoken For,” delivers the project’s most haunting metaphor: a child silenced by a controlling parent, visualized through an android whose cracking voice box reveals the vulnerable human underneath.

    An Artist Reclaimed

    Half French, half American, Jeeve has long lived in dualities – acclaimed music producer yet anonymous artist. With Spoken For – The Movie, he breaks that pattern. Writing, directing, producing, mixing, and editing virtually every element himself – using tools like Photoshop, Kling AI, Runway, Google Veo 3, Midjourney, and Topaz AI – Jeeve emerges as a true auteur.

    “I’ve made music for others my whole career,” he reflects. “This is the first time I told myself what to do, and I finally listened.”

    Release Date: January 9, 2026

    Platforms: Streaming on all major platforms; visual films premiering on Apple TV, Amazon Prime Video, Google Play Movies, YouTube TV, and Fandango at Home.

    Contact Information

    Jean-Yves Ducornet
    bigjeeve@gmail.com

    Source: Crystal Ship Music

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  • Best Bets: The Lehman Trilogy, Fiesta Sinfónica, and Manhattan Short Film Festival

    It’s the last Best Bets of September, and the arts are in full swing around Houston. To close out the month, we’ve got an epic of a stage production, a celebration of Latin American and Hispanic composers, and a collection of the best short films you can find. Keep reading for these and everything else that makes our picks for the best of the week.


    On Friday, September 26, at 7 p.m. at Stages, you can see The Lehman Trilogy, which, adapted by Ben Power from Stefano Massini’s epic novel and play about the rise and fall of Lehman Brothers, covers 160 years and features over 70 characters. Orlando Arriaga, one of three actors in the production, told BroadwayWorld Houston, “There were a lot of characters to create but for most of them I came to an immediate decision on who they were and how I was going to present them. I didn’t bother with time periods because human beings deal with family, love and money pretty much the same since the beginning of time.” Performances will continue at 6:30 p.m. Wednesdays and Thursdays, 7 p.m. Fridays, 1 and 7 p.m. Saturdays, and 1 p.m. Sundays through October 12. Tickets are available here for $25 to $109.

    When Alex Thompson’s short film Em & Selma Go Griffin Hunting screened at Sundance, the first frame, with its “so-real-you-can-touch-it CG image” of two griffins, “elicited gasps of amazement.” You can join film lovers from around the world to view and vote on the shorts featured in the 28th Annual Manhattan Short Film Festival – including Thompson’s – at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, on Thursday, September 25, at 7 p.m. Audience ballots will determine the winners of Best Film and Best Actor from the ten curated films, which come from seven different countries. The films will screen again at 7 p.m. Friday, September 26, and 2 p.m. Saturday, September 27, and Sunday, September 28. Tickets can be purchased here for $8 to $10, and get your tickets in advance; some screenings are likely to sell out.

    A string arrangement of Benjamin Britten’s 1932 Double Concerto for Violin and Viola, the sketch of which was only discovered more than 20 years after his death in 1976, will be the centerpiece of Kinetic’s season-opening concert, Notes Unspoken, at the MATCH on Friday, September 26, at 7:30 p.m. The conductor-less ensemble will tackle Britten alongside Michael Torke‘s December, Libby Larsen’s String Symphony, and the world premiere of Rice University graduate Alex Berko’s Unstrung for string orchestration. Berko, who originally composed Unstrung for the Louisville Orchestra in 2024, has said the piece, “a deconstructed bluegrass tune,” was his attempt “as a new Kentucky resident and admirer of” the genre “to pay homage to the art form.” Tickets to the performance can be purchased here for $15 to $35.

    click to enlarge

    ROCO returns to Miller Outdoor Theatre to open their season on Friday.

    Photo by Rolando Ramon

    Four world premieres and a not-oft-heard symphony make up ROCO’s season-opening program, Feels Like Home, which you can hear on Friday, September 26, at 7:30 p.m. when the chamber orchestra visits Miller Outdoor Theatre. The premieres, which will be performed alongside Emilie Mayer’s 1847 Symphony No. 4 in B minor, draw from various sources of inspiration, including husky rescues and a ROCO member’s work in hospice care. The performance is free, and you can reserve a ticket here starting at 10 a.m. today, September 25. Or, as always, you can sit on the Hill – no ticket required. The concert will be performed a second time at The Church of St. John the Divine on Saturday, September 27, at 5 p.m. Tickets are pay-what-you-wish here with a suggested price of $35 and a minimum of $0.

    A percussive pulse drives the lover’s declarations in ‘And now you’re mine,’” one of five sonnets written by Chilean poet Pablo Neruda and set to music by American composer Peter Lieberson in Neruda Songs, which you can hear at Jones Hall on Friday, September 26, at 7:30 p.m. during the Fiesta Sinfónica. Conductor Gonzalo Farias will lead the Houston Symphony and special guest mezzo-soprano Josefina Maldonado in the orchestra’s annual celebration of Latin American and Hispanic composers. This year, audiences can expect musical selections like “I Feel Pretty” and “Somewhere” from Leonard Bernstein’s West Side Story, the Habanera from Georges Bizet’s Carmen, Albert Gonzales’s arrangements of Rafael Hernández Marín’s “El Cumbanchero” and Daniel Alomía Robles’s “El cóndor pasa,” and more. This concert is free, but ticket reservations are required here.

    click to enlarge

    6 Degrees Dance company members Michelle Reyes, Shelby Craze, and Mia Pham in Testimony with steel sculptures by Craze.

    Photo by Adri Richey Photography

    Inspired by Shahzia Sikander’s vandalized sculpture “Witness,” choreographer Toni Valle of 6 Degrees Dance, composer George Heathco, and singer-composer Misha Penton created Testimony, an aerial dance and visual art installation that will premiere at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, September 25, at the MATCH. Valle recently told the Houston Press that though “Witness” is their “point of reference, Testimony is also about the much larger picture of how women in general have been silenced,” adding that the beheading of the statue is “such a metaphor for how violence is often used to silence artists, to silence women, to silence people.Testimony will be performed again at 7:30 p.m. Friday, September 26, and Saturday, September 27, and 5 p.m. Sunday, September 28. Tickets can be purchased here for $20-$35, with a pay-what-you-can option on September 26.

    After going from viral on TikTok to selling out comedy clubs around the country, Jiaoying Summers will return to Punchline Houston on Friday, September 26, at 7:30 p.m. with her latest hour of comedy, What Specie Are You? Summers recently told the Houston Press the show will be her “origin story,” saying, “We laugh about all the things that have happened and what I’ve been a victim of…I think that is the best place to find good comedy, to say things you are embarrassed of and ashamed of and make it funny. People can connect with me, I think.” Additional shows are set for 9:45 p.m. Friday, September 26, and 7 and 9:15 p.m. Saturday, September 27. Tickets to the show can be purchased here for $32 to $69.


    Arthouse Houston
    ’s Mobile Movie Palace is once again setting up shop at the MATCH, this time on Sunday, September 28, at 7 p.m. to screen the Jane Fonda-Lily Tomlin-Dolly Parton comedy 9 to 5, “a feminist lark with laughs, crude comedy, wafts of pot smoke and a catchy anthem written by Parton.” Doors open at 7 p.m. for a set from Houston singer-songwriter Allison Holmes, who will perform live country music from artists like Parton and Loretta Lynn prior to the start of the revenge comedy, which “hit No. 2 at the box office in 1980, beaten only by The Empire Strikes Back.” The film, about three office workers who kidnap their horrible boss, will then begin at 7:40 p.m. General admission tickets are pay-what-you-can, with a suggested price of $20, here.

    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Murals in the Market is restoring beloved works of art ahead of its Eastern Market return

    Organizers behind Detroit’s Murals in the Market have been quietly restoring three works of art in Eastern Market to celebrate the festival’s 10th anniversary and upcoming return to the district.

    Muralists Ed Irmen and Jay Kopicki are at work completely repainting a mural by Chicago-born artist Hebru Brantley, one of the festival’s first when it debuted in 2015.

    “It’s a pretty big honor to be able to recreate somebody else’s work and to be trusted to do it the right way,” Irmen tells Metro Times during a break. “It’s really important that we preserve a lot of these pieces because ultimately time takes its toll, and especially with this being from the first festival that we ever had, it makes it of pretty significant importance to the market.”

    The mural is located at the corner of Russell and Adelaide Streets and features Brantley’s “Flyboy” character, an aviator, goggles-wearing child that symbolizes freedom and dreams. It’s also a nod to the famed Tuskegee Airmen from World War II.

    Within the past week, Irmen and Kopicki have also restored a watermelon-themed “Welcome to Eastern Market” mural made in 2017 by Zak Meers, as well as Scott Hocking’s 2018 installation “Seventeen Shitty Mountains,” made from concrete tubes salvaged from the old Detroit Water and Sewerage Department building in the district and painted in neon Day-Glo colors.

    After years bringing dozens of murals to Eastern Market, the festival rebranded as Murals in Islandview in 2023 following parent company 1XRUN’s relocation to that neighborhood. Earlier this summer, organizers announced Murals in the Market would return to Eastern Market for its 10th anniversary.

    1XRUN co-founder Jesse Cory says murals typically last between five and ten years before the paint starts fading and chipping. He adds that organizers did not necessarily intend for the festival’s murals to last this long. “All we asked was for [business owners] to keep the murals up for at least a year,” he explains, adding, “The fact that it’s a walkable mural gallery, I think the business owners like that it exists.”

    There is always an ephemeral nature to street art, and mural festivals often paint over their walls, including Murals in the Market in certain high-traffic areas of the district. But Cory says the nonprofit that operates Eastern Market selected the three works for restoration because they have become part of the identity of the district.

    “It wasn’t necessarily about how well-known the artist is,” Cory says. “They wanted things that they felt represented the spirit of the market.”

    “Seventeen Shitty Mountains” was an instant hit, even being relocated by Eastern Market to a more visible area.

    The installation now has a fresh coat of fluorescent paint. It’s a cheeky reference to “Seven Magic Mountains,” an installation by Swiss artist Ugo Rondinone made from neon-painted rocks in the Nevada desert.

    Courtesy photo

    Scott Hocking’s 2018 installation “Seventeen Shitty Mountains” is made from concrete tubes salvaged from the old Detroit Water and Sewerage Department.

    “[Hocking] painted them these Day-Glo colors, I think, to represent those rock sculptures that are in Nevada,” Cory says. “I think it was kind of like Detroit’s version of that, like, ‘You have your rocks, we have our sewer tubes.’”

    The Brantley piece had become so degraded that 1XRUN got the blessing of Brantley to completely re-create the mural from scratch using high-quality photos and color-matched paint, starting over with a blank white slate of primer.

    “From what you would see less than a week ago to today, the vibrancy is popping off the wall,” Irmen says. “It’s hard to believe it was ever these colors.”

    For the Brantley mural, Irmen and Kopicki developed a technique where Kopicki starts from the bottom and draws the lines, with Irmen following behind.

    Irmen describes the effect as similar to an image slowly loading line-by-line on an old-school internet connection.

    “It kind of gives it that dial-up loading screen kind of vibe,” he says. “You’re seeing the image come together as we’re moving down the wall.”

    The Murals in the Market festival has been the backdrop to big development projects in the historic shopping district in recent years. In 2018, it was named one of the world’s best mural festivals by Smithsonian magazine. Eastern Market has also seen an influx of football season tailgaters with the Detroit Lions doing so well and Ford Field nearby.

    Murals have flourished in the city as Mayor Mike Duggan has cracked down on graffiti. Cory says the festival has not had any issues with the murals being vandalized or tagged.

    “Many people that are from the graffiti culture, we work with them on an ongoing basis,” Cory says. “We have a good relationship.”

    He adds, “The pressure on the city to buff, all the stuff that they’ve done to put pressure on graffiti pushed a lot of people who did want to paint outside … it pushed them more into becoming a muralist. Our culture crosses over.”

    A watermelon-themed “Welcome to Eastern Market” mural made in 2017 by Zak Meers. - Courtesy photo

    Courtesy photo

    A watermelon-themed “Welcome to Eastern Market” mural made in 2017 by Zak Meers.

    Cory says funding for this year’s festival came from Eastern Market, as well as the Gilbert Family Foundation and General Motors, a new sponsor this year. He also says the festival has become financially established to be able to pay all artists this year, a festival first.

    “It’s good to be back, and it’s good to be funded,” he says. “In years past, we always announced it before we raised a dollar. … The first year was really tough, the second year was really tough, the third year was really tough, the fourth year was really tough. This year, I think the value is there, the tenure of it is there.”

    He adds, “Detroit’s a very unique place … We have a huge art community, and we have a very substantial arts economy. It’s a whole industry. You don’t see that in other cities.”

    This year’s festival is set for Sept. 15-22, bringing more than a dozen new murals to the district from local artists like Amy Fisher Price, Bakpak Durden, Freddy Diaz, Ijania Cortez, Ivan Montoya, Nicole Macdonald, Phil Simpson, Sheefy Mcfly, and Tony WHLGN, among others.

    New this year, the festival’s headquarters will be situated in a warehouse at 1520 Winder St., which includes an exhibition celebrating 10 years of 1XRUN’s visual artist residency program at Detroit’s Movement music festival. Other festival programming includes panel discussions, tours, and DJs.

    Irmen says he hopes to finish the restoration work before the festival starts. He and Kopicki are also creating new murals for the festival, as well as working with 1XRUN behind the scenes.

    “I can’t wait to see what the artists put up this year,” Irmen says.

    Lee DeVito

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  • This Week is Your Last Chance to See Vibrant The Whale Exhibit in Fort Worth

    It takes cojones for a contemporary artist to look at decades of paintings and decide they have something to add to the conversation. However, with The Whale, Venezuelan-American artist Alex Da Corte’s first survey at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, twists and (literally) flips some of the museum’s most iconic pieces sideways with aplomb…

    Kendall Morgan

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  • Detroit artist transforms Noxx Cannabis wall in Pleasant Ridge

    Steve Neavling

    Detroit artist Jonathan Sandberg, also known as Seymor, paints a mural on the side of Noxx Cannabis in Pleasant Ridge.

    Detroit muralist Jonathan Sandberg has transformed a Pleasant Ridge dispensary wall into a vibrant work of art after winning a community art contest.

    The 430-square-foot mural by Sandberg, also known as Seymor, now covers the side of Noxx Cannabis at 23622 Woodward Ave., where thousands of motorists pass daily.

    His design, a teal-accented mural featuring a wispy white tree with mist-like roots and glowing square leaves, was selected in May through a public vote after more than a dozen local artists submitted proposals.

    “I’ve been painting murals seriously for about seven years, but the last couple years have really picked up,” Sandberg, who lives in Detroit’s Bagley neighborhood, tells Metro Times. “I’ve been painting since I was born, but once I started focusing on these trees, it gave me a little niche to keep pushing and defining my work.”

    The piece is part of Sandberg’s signature style of surreal trees with geometric shapes and an ethereal background that blends natural forms with the abstract. Over the past few years, he has refined his theme into what he describes as both a metaphor and meditation – tree leaves that double as neurons and perhaps vessels of a “collective unconscious.”

    “All the trees have their own personality,” Sandberg says. “I haven’t figured out if it’s the collective unconscious or the Earth. It kind of gives me liberty to be a little bit more playful.”

    The Noxx contest, hosted in partnership with the Pleasant Ridge Art Council and partially funded by cannabis tax revenue, required artists to use the company’s teal color, avoid cannabis imagery, and create a piece that spoke to Detroit’s character.

    Sandberg embraced the restrictions, using black, teal, and grayscale tones to create a layered design centered on a sprawling tree trunk, fog-like textures at its base, and shimmering, square leaves along its branches.

    Sandberg worked on the mural over the past three weekends and recently finished it.

    The result is a vibrant, whimsical and head-turning mural that brightens up Woodward Avenue.

    Sandberg says he was inspired by Detroit street artist Jordan “Tead” Vaughn,” who died in 2017 after falling through a roof while painting a mural. Vaughn was known for his unique, dreamlike bursts of color and hallucinatory landscapes.

    “He did these really trippy industrial landscapes,” Sandberg says. “I remember seeing those for the first time, and I always loved graffiti, but it wasn’t necessarily how my brain worked. But seeing how he used spray paint, like my brain works, I decided I’m going to learn this, and I started figuring it out.”

    For the first six months or so, Sandberg began experimenting with graffiti, and the results, he says, were some “bad paintings.” But Sandberg persisted and found his style. He’s been painting beautiful murals since.

    Tead’s mother Jenny Vaughn encouraged Sandberg to enter the Noxx mural contest. He also served in the Tead One Memorial Artist in Residence Program, a residency program set up in Tead’s honor.

    “It really came back full circle,” Sandberg says.

    Steve Neavling

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  • The Antidote Fest lands at DSC August 23rd

    Antidote Fest is an annual music and culture festival presented by The Antidote Studio, designed to uplift the community through music, art, and youth empowerment. Hosted in Detroit, MI the event features live performances from rising and established artists, DJs, and special guests, creating a high-energy environment for all ages.

    The festival serves as a fundraiser to support youth music programming and afterschool initiatives led by The Antidote Studio and SBEV (Sylvester Broome Empowerment Village). All proceeds help provide creative resources, studio access, mentorship, and safe spaces for young artists to grow.

    The Antidote Fest lands at DSC August 23rd

    2025 Details:

    • Date: Saturday August 23, 2025 6-11:30PM
    • Location: Detroit Shipping Company, 474 Peterboro St. Detroit, MI
    • Highlights: Live performances, DJ sets, food, giveaways, and community engagement

    Antidote Fest is more than just a concert, it’s a movement that merges music with mission, building a platform for youth voices and positive change.

    Global Food Vendors and Full Bar on-site

    Tickets: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-antidote-fest-4-tickets-1434779627489


    The Antidote Fest lands at DSC August 23rd

    Metro Times Promotions

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  • Best Bets: Islamic Arts Festival, Playhouse Creatures and Myths and Leyendas

    One time change later, and it’s another week, another list of best bets. This week, we’ve got an immersive theater experience, a musical trip back to the Harlem Renaissance, and a celebration of Islamic arts. Keep reading for these and more events that got our pick for the best things to do this coming week.

    Imagine a Major League Baseball player making a political protest on the biggest stage – Game 7 of the World Series – and you’ve got Gabriel Greene and Alex Levy’s Safe at Home, a 90-minute immersive production that the University of Houston’s School of Theatre & Dance will open tonight, Thursday, November 7, at 7 p.m. at Schroeder Park. Director Jack Reuler, who has directed every production of Safe at Home to date, recently told the Houston Press that though the play uses baseball as a metaphor, the immersive 90-minute production is “really a play about us, immigration policy, about Major League Baseball’s relationship to its players from other countries, our fascination with celebrity.” Performances will continue at 7 p.m. through Sunday, November 10. Tickets are available here for $15 to $20.

    Delve into Italian composer Claudio Monteverdi’s eighth book of madrigals, published in 1638, during Ars Lyrica’s latest program, Madrigals of Love and War, at 7:30 p.m. on Friday, November 8, at the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts. Six singers – bass-baritone Enrico Lagasca, countertenor Michael Skarke, sopranos Amia Langer and Erica Schuller, and tenors Steven Brennfleck and Thomas O’Neill – will join eight musicians playing period instruments to perform a selection of Monteverdi’s part-songs, including one of his most famous works Lamento della Ninfa, as well as instrumental pieces from fellow Italians from the early Baroque period like Giovanni Paolo Cima and Bartolomeo Montalbano. Tickets to the in-person concert can be purchased here for $15 to $80, or you can stream the performance from home with a $20 digital ticket.

    Step back in time to the Harlem Renaissance for a jazzy evening inspired by nightspots like the Cotton Club and Savoy Ballroom when the Houston Symphony presents It Don’t Mean a Thing: Swingin’ Uptown Classics with Byron Stripling at Jones Hall on Friday, November 8, 2024 at 7:30 p.m. Conductor, trumpeter, and singer Stripling will lead the Symphony, along with guests Carmen Bradford and Leo Manzari, in a program of jazz standards from artists like Ella Fitzgerald, Duke Ellington, and Cab Calloway. The concert will also be performed on Saturday, November 9, at 7:30 p.m. and Sunday, November 10, at 2 p.m. In-hall tickets to any of the performances can be purchased here for $40 to $115. If you can’t make it, you can access a livestream of Saturday night’s show here for $20. 

    Spend time with five actresses, some of the first to be allowed to act publicly, in Restoration-era London on Friday, November 8, at 8 p.m. when Lionwoman Productions TX opens the Texas premiere of British playwright April De Angelis’s 1993 play Playhouse Creatures at the MATCH. De Angelis has said audiences “will be able to travel back in time watching this play and be in the company of these exciting actresses” and see what it may have been like “to have all that attention and be artists in the public eye” at a time “women were a bit seen and not heard.” Performances will continue through November 23 at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays and November 11, 8 p.m. Fridays and Saturdays, 3 p.m. Sundays, and 4:30 p.m. November 16. Tickets are available here for $17 to $40.

    For the first time, the 11th Annual Islamic Arts Festival, a two-day celebration touted as the largest festival of Islamic arts in the country, will be held at the University of Houston starting this Saturday, November 9, from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. In addition to more than 5,000 works of art on display, a variety of activities for children, and live demonstrations of calligraphy, henna, and ebru, this year, festivalgoers can attend a spoken word program, a film festival celebrating Muslim voices in cinema, a performance by the Spain-based Al-Firdaus Ensemble, and a Muslim comedy show. The festival continues on Sunday, November 10, from 10:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Admission to the festival is free, but a $15 ticket (or $45 VIP seating ticket) is needed to attend Saturday’s comedy show and performance by Al-Firdaus Ensemble.

    Americans were formally introduced to now landmark anime series Cowboy Bebop, about a group of bounty hunters traveling through space in the year 2071, in September 2001 when Cartoon Network premiered Adult Swim, their new late-night programming block. The series, which ran for only one 26-episode season in Japan, has been described as a “1:1 mix of sci-fi western and film noir, steeped in American jazz and blues and framed by retro James Bond-meets-Blue Note credits” that “was guaranteed to spawn a reverent cult.” On Saturday, November 9, at 7:30 p.m., Asia Society Texas will celebrate its latest exhibit, “Space City: Art in the Age of Artemis,” with a series of space-themed anime films – the first being Cowboy Bebop: The Movie from 2001. Tickets for the 18-and-up screening can be purchased here for $12 to $15.

    Celebrate the Latin American collection at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and be present for the unveiling of new sculptures by six local Latinx artists on Sunday, November 10, from 1 to 5 p.m. during the Myths and Leyendas Fall Festival in the museum’s Brown Foundation, Inc. Plaza and the Cullen Sculpture Garden. The family-friendly festival will feature art activities, music and dance performances, plenty of food vendors, film screenings from the Houston Latino Film Festival, and a game of lotería. Admission to both the festival and general admission to the museum will be free all day, and you must reserve a ticket here. If you can’t make it, the sculptures – created by artists Loriana Espinel, Diana Gonzalez, Francisco Pereira, Jean Sandoval, Alma Soto, and Ashley Raquel Trejo – will remain on view through November 17.

    Worlds collide over at the Wortham Theater Center on Tuesday, November 12, at 7:30 p.m. when Performing Arts Houston presents Vitamin String Quartet: The Music of Taylor Swift, Bridgerton, and Beyond. The ensemble has been releasing musical mashups since 1999 under CMH Label Group and was recently featured during episodes of Bridgerton. Leo Flynn, the co-creative director and brand manager at CMH Label Group, has said the hit show “on a massive scale has done in the TV space” what the quartet aims to do: “Bringing worlds together to show the commonalities, to show how much energy there is when we connect to things and each other.” There are a handful of seats left to see the concert – which promises music from artists like Billie Eilish and BTS, too – and you can purchase them here for $29 to $79.

    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Womxnhouse Detroit returns with a defiant reclamation of womanhood

    Womxnhouse Detroit returns with a defiant reclamation of womanhood

    Entering Womxnhouse Detroit’s 2024 installation feels like being in my grandmother’s living room. Tables are crowded with knickknacks, lottery tickets, and those ceramic good luck elephants. Walls serve as a family tree decorated with photos of relatives and occasionally someone will pull out a VHS of home videos.

    The Womxnhouse living room is a warm space but in the crevices of smiles and grandma’s couch cushions are bottles of booze and whispers of generational trauma.

    “Nothing Leaves This Room” is Gyona Rice’s mixed-media installation for this year’s Womxnhouse — a yearly cohort of women and gender non-binary artists who fill every room in a Grandmont-Rosedale house with art. It’s curated by Norwest Gallery of Art owner Asia Hamilton and Laura Earle and is on display until November 17.

    This year marks the third iteration of Womxnhouse Detroit after a short hiatus in 2023 and the fourth installment in Michigan. The first two Detroit rounds filled Hamilton’s childhood home with installations, but it’s moved to a different location in the same neighborhood this year. The project is based on the 1972 feminist “Womanhouse” project in Los Angeles which inspired Earle to curate Michgan’s first Womxnhouse in Manchester in 2018.

    “Womxnhouse for me, really was an opportunity for women to get together and support each other,” Hamilton says. “It was a necessary thing because there’s not enough safe spaces for us to really express ourselves and be vulnerable… We’re expected to take so much.”

    In addition to Rice, this year’s house features work by Michaela Ayers, Kashira Dowridge, Laura Earle, Takeisha Jefferson, lauren jones, Elise Marie Martin, Danielle deo Owensby, Megan Rizzo, Brittany Rogers, and Cat Washington.

    Back in the living room, Rice reflects on how her childhood trauma from alcohol abuse does not define her and she loves her family regardless of what she may have experienced. She’s a printmaker and includes linocuts she created of her grandmother, mom, aunts, and sister in the installation to honor them.

    “Regardless of all the trauma and things that might have seemed negative, I was able to go to college, I was able to always get all A’s, [and] I was able to do great things,” she says. “Especially in Black households, we’re always told, ‘What goes on in this house stays in this house,’ so I would like you to interact with it. Write your feelings and what you feel like you want to stay in this room.”

    Venturing further into the dining room, photos of women in Takeisha Jefferson’s family shot by the photographer look over a buffet and table hoarded with overflowing bills. The room is chaotic, with the table ready to buckle under the weight of a woman’s burdens that she is struggling to bear.

    “What you’re seeing is a room caught in time, almost paused,” Jefferson explains. “A woman [who is] overwhelmed… A woman who is looking at affirmations to try and see how she can press forward to do something different in her life, all while trying to maintain and hold her household together.”

    The walk up the stairs confronts me with invasive things people have said to Elise Marie Martin like, “You’re too young for all that makeup,” and, “What if you change your mind about having kids?”

    click to enlarge

    Courtesy of the artist

    Michaela Ayers was inspired to explore the sensuality of divine femininity in these photos taken by Takeisha Jefferson.

    Then Michaela Ayers’s lush room transports me into a sensual oasis of opulence in a garden of thriving green plants and low lighting. As I enter through a lace curtain I am graced with a candid moment of Ayers in a bathtub with sunflowers brushing against her bare skin as they swim in the tub of self indulgence. Incense wafts across deep red walls held in incense burners the ceramic artist has crafted alongside plant holders also made by Ayers’s hands. Several other erotic photos of her decorate the walls, shot by her fellow Womxnhouse artist Jefferson.

    Many of Ayers’s ceramics are imbued with spirals, like an unending journey, always shifting, changing, and evolving. She sees them as ceremonial but also multifunctional as sculptures double as incense holders and smudge stick trays.

    Growing up in a religious household where sexuality (especially outside the heteronormative) was taboo inspired her photos.

    “I was really wanting to explore my divine feminine energy, what that looks like for me in my most raw state, and I can’t think of a more raw state than allowing myself to really be seen,” she says. “There’s also, in conversation with these photographs, a desire to interrogate boudoir photos from the 1920s. Very rarely, in my experience, would I see representation of Black women in these photos, and those were often the images that were upheld as standards of beauty. And so with these images, I also wanted to disrupt that.”

    Across the hall, in contrast to the sultry reprieve of Ayers’s work, a bright pink room draws in sunlight through curtains fashioned from kanekalon braids. This is poet Brittany Rogers’s room where adorning the body is explored as a protection ritual. Flowers with petals fashioned from acrylic nails dot the room and her poem, “Self Portrait as Aretha’s Gold Purse” proclaims, “Why should I make myself invisible?” Rogers’s debut poetry collection, Good Dress, is due out in October from Tin House.

    “As a Detroit femme… beautification becomes a type of grounding, essentially like armor, what we need for survival,” she says while sitting at a vanity with the question “When was the last time that you saw yourself?” written on it. Photos of her matrilineage including her mother, daughter, and cousins line the wall above.

    “Beautification is what keeps me alive,” she continues. “The ability to wake up and look exactly the way that I want to look on any given day makes me feel very grounded. And I think the world can be so jarring, can be so violent, especially toward Black queer folks, that feeling like myself, at the very least, is my start to be like, OK, nobody can disrupt me.”

    In a nearby closet audio plays of femmes telling her about a time in their life that they felt the most beautiful.

    Back downstairs, in a foil covered room Kashira Dowridge’s film Time Will Tell plays like the house’s soundtrack — an ode to reclaiming, rediscovering, and loving herself.

    Cat Washington’s crochet work pays tribute to Black women killed in their homes by police like Sonya Massey and Breonna Taylor while Megan Rizzo brings us into the heart of her family’s home — the kitchen. Elsewhere lauren jones creates a den of ancestral memories with an archive of Black books and photos where a prayer plays on the other line of a telephone receiver.

    Tea-stained pages of affirmations in Jefferson’s room look like burnt Bible passages making me recite scriptures of self love as I read them, passing back through the dining room archway. “I walk through this world with purpose and grace.” “I carry the wisdom of those who came before me.” “Stop caring what anyone else thinks and focus on building your own lane.”

    The house feels like a sanctuary, with the air of a woman dancing as fluid as water, any imprints of society’s projections of womanhood dissipating from her aura like a cloud. As I begin to step out the door, words from Dowridge’s film ring in my ear, “Don’t stay too long in the shadows of disbelief.”

    Editor’s note: The author of this article was a featured artist in Womxnhouse Detroit 2022.

    Womxnhouse Detroit 2024 is on view through Nov. 17 at 14620 Grandmont Rd., Detroit. Tickets can be purchased at womxnhouse.life for a $35 suggested donation.

    Randiah Camille Green

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  • Free Will Astrology (Oct. 2-8)

    Free Will Astrology (Oct. 2-8)

    ARIES (March 21-April 19): During some Wiccan rituals, participants are asked, “What binds you? And what will you do to free yourself from what binds you?” I recommend this exercise to you right now, Aries. Here’s a third question: Will you replace your shackles with a weaving that inspires and empowers you? In other words, will you shed what binds you and, in its stead, create a bond that links you to an influence you treasure?

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20): If I had to name the zodiac sign that other signs are most likely to underestimate, I would say Taurus. Why? Well, many of you Bulls are rather modest and humble. You prefer to let your practical actions speak louder than fine words. Your well-grounded strength is diligent and poised, not flashy. People may misread your resilience and dependability as signs of passivity. But here’s good news, dear Taurus: In the coming weeks, you will be less likely to be undervalued and overlooked. Even those who have been ignorant of your appeal may tune in to the fullness of your tender power and earthy wisdom.

    GEMINI (May 21-June 20): In the coming days, I invite you to work on writing an essay called “People and Things I Never Knew I Liked and Loved Until Now.” To get the project started, visit places that have previously been off your radar. Wander around in uncharted territory, inviting life to surprise you. Call on every trick you know to stimulate your imagination and break out of habitual ruts of thinking. A key practice will be to experiment and improvise as you open your heart and your eyes wide. Here’s my prophecy: In the frontiers, you will encounter unruly delights that inspire you to grow wiser.

    CANCER (June 21-July 22): Now is an excellent time to search for new teachers, mentors, and role models. Please cooperate with life’s intention to connect you with people and animals who can inspire your journey for the months and years ahead. A good way to prepare yourself for this onslaught of grace is to contemplate the history of your educational experiences. Who are the heroes, helpers, and villains who have taught you crucial lessons? Another strategy to get ready is to think about what’s most vital for you to learn right now. What are the gaps in your understanding that need to be filled?

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): The English language has more synonyms than any other language. That’s in part because it’s like a magpie. It steals words from many tongues, including German, French, Old Norse, Latin, and Greek, as well as from Algonquin, Chinese, Hindi, Basque, and Tagalog. Japanese may be the next most magpie-like language. It borrows from English, Chinese, Portuguese, Dutch, French, and German. In accordance with astrological possibilities, I invite you to adopt the spirit of the English and Japanese languages in the coming weeks. Freely borrow and steal influences. Be a collector of sundry inspirations, a scavenger of fun ideas, a gatherer of rich cultural diversity.

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Here are my bold decrees: You are entitled to extra bonuses and special privileges in the coming weeks. The biggest piece of every cake and pie should go to you, as should the freshest wonders, the most provocative revelations, and the wildest breakthroughs. I invite you to give and take extravagant amounts of everything you regard as sweet, rich, and nourishing. I hope you will begin cultivating a skill you are destined to master. I trust you will receive clear and direct answers to at least two nagging questions.

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): On those infrequent occasions when I buy a new gadget, I never read the instructions. I drop the booklet in the recycling bin immediately, despite the fact that I may not know all the fine points of using my new vacuum cleaner, air purifier, or hairdryer. Research reveals that I am typical. Ninety-two percent of all instructions get thrown away. I don’t recommend this approach to you in the coming weeks, however, whether you’re dealing with gadgets or more intangible things. You really should call on guidance to help you navigate your way through introductory phases and new experiences.

    SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): I knew a Scorpio performance artist who did a splashy public show about private matters. She stationed herself on the rooftop of an apartment building and for 12 hours loudly described everything she felt guilty about. (She was an ex-Catholic who had been raised to regard some normal behavior as sinful.) If you, dear Scorpio, have ever felt an urge to engage in a purge of remorse, now would be an excellent time. I suggest an alternate approach, though. Spend a half hour writing your regrets on paper, then burn the paper in the kitchen sink as you chant something like the following: “With love and compassion for myself, I apologize for my shortcomings and frailties. I declare myself free of shame and guilt. I forgive myself forever.”

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Be HEARTY, POTENT, and DYNAMIC, Sagittarius. Don’t worry about decorum and propriety. Be in quest of lively twists that excite the adventurer in you. Avoid anyone who seems to like you best when you are anxious or tightly controlled. Don’t proceed as if you have nothing to lose; instead, act as if you have everything to win. Finally, my dear, ask life to bring you a steady stream of marvels that make you overjoyed to be alive. If you’re feeling extra bold (and I believe you will), request the delivery of a miracle or two.

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Nineteenth-century Capricorn author Anne Brontë wrote The Tenant of Wildfell Hall, which many critics regard as the first feminist novel. It challenged contemporary social customs. The main character, Helen, leaves her husband because he’s a bad influence on their son. She goes into hiding, becoming a single mother who supports her family by creating art. Unfortunately, after the author’s death at a young age, her older sister Charlotte suppressed the publication of The Tenant of Wildfell Hall. It’s not well-known today. I bring this to your attention, Capricorn, so as to inspire you to action. I believe the coming months will be a favorable time to get the attention and recognition you’ve been denied but thoroughly deserve. Start now! Liberate, express, and disseminate whatever has been suppressed.

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): What is the most important question you want to find an answer for during the next year? The coming weeks will be an excellent time to formulate that inquiry clearly and concisely. I urge you to write it out in longhand and place it in a prominent place in your home. Ponder it lightly and lovingly for two minutes every morning upon awakening and each night before sleep. (Key descriptors: “lightly and lovingly.”) As new insights float into your awareness, jot them down. One further suggestion: Create or acquire a symbolic representation of the primal question.

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Scientific research suggests that some foods are more addictive than cocaine. They include pizza, chocolate, potato chips, and ice cream. The good news is that they are not as problematic for long-term health as cocaine. The bad news is that they are not exactly healthy. (The sugar in chocolate neutralizes its modest health benefits.) With these facts in mind, Pisces, I invite you to reorder your priorities about addictive things. Now is a favorable time to figure out what substances and activities might be tonifying, invigorating addictions — and then retrain yourself to focus your addictive energy on them. Maybe you could encourage an addiction to juices that blend spinach, cucumber, kale, celery, and apple. Perhaps you could cultivate an addiction to doing a pleasurable form of exercise or reading books that thrill your imagination.

    Homework: Interested in my inside thoughts about astrology? Read my book Astrology Is Real. Free excerpts: tinyurl.com/BraveBliss

    Rob Brezsny

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  • A Delicious Farewell to a Season of Fun and Adventure!

    A Delicious Farewell to a Season of Fun and Adventure!

    Holly, MI – September 27th – September 29th, 2024 – Calling all dessert lovers and festival enthusiasts! The Michigan Renaissance Festival is gearing up for its final weekend, and it promises to be a “Sweet Ending” to an unforgettable season. This is your last chance to step into the enchanting Valley and experience the magic, tastes, and thrills of the Renaissance. The grand finale weekend will take place this coming weekend.

    A Sweet Treat for Dessert Lovers

    Prepare your taste buds for a delightful journey through the Valley as you savor some of the finest local sweets. From decadent desserts to irresistible treats, the final weekend promises to satisfy every craving. Complimentary samples will be available throughout the festival grounds, so don’t miss out on the opportunity to indulge in a wide range of delectable flavors!

    Royal Events and Fun for All

    In addition to sweet treats, the final weekend is packed with royal events and activities for everyone, including:

    • Feast of Fantasy: Experience an extravagant meal of five courses fit for royalty!
    • Cocktail Crawl: Sip your way through the festival grounds with a collection of delicious cocktails.
    • Birds of Prey Show: Be amazed by majestic raptors in a thrilling display of flight and skill.
    • Wooing Contest: Show off your best romantic charms and win the hearts of the crowd!
    • Couples Costume Contest: Dress in your Renaissance best and compete for the title of best-dressed duo.
    • Passing the Apple Contest: Test your teamwork and coordination in this classic festival challenge!

    Nonstop Entertainment and Unique Artisan Gifts

    The Michigan Renaissance Festival is home to 17 stages of nonstop entertainment, all included in the price of general admission. From jousting knights to comedy acts and musical performances, there’s something for every member of the family to enjoy. Plus, explore over 150 artisan craft vendors, where you’ll find one-of-a-kind gifts, handmade treasures, and keepsakes to remember your festival experience.

    Don’t Miss Out on the Final Weekend!

    This is the last chance of the season to enjoy all the fun, excitement, and flavor the Michigan Renaissance Festival has to offer. Whether you’re there for the sweet treats, the royal events, or the endless entertainment, it’s a weekend not to be missed.

    Tickets and Information

    When: September 27th through September 29th, 2024

    Where: 12600 Dixie Highway, Holly, MI 48442

    Cost: Adult $26.95, Children’s (5-12) $16.95, Children (4 and under) FREE! Purchase Parking Passes online or when you arrive. Discounted tickets available at Kroger’s, Menards, Walgreen and online at www.michrenfest.com

    Metro Times Promotions

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  • Art Fair Detroit is happening this weekend – here’s what to know

    Art Fair Detroit is happening this weekend – here’s what to know

    Art lovers, get ready!

    Over 180 artists, most of them from Detroit, will be showcasing and selling their work at five different locations across the city during Art Fair Detroit, running this weekend from Sept. 27-29.

    The event is being organized by ArtClvb, a new platform revolutionizing how artists, collectors, and art enthusiasts connect within art ecosystems. While the full launch of the app is still in the works, ArtClvb is already equipped with all the key features for this year’s festival.

    The app serves as a ticket to the festival, as well as a guide for learning about and purchasing art.

    Art Fair Detroit representatives will be checking tickets at the doors of each venue. After downloading the app and setting up a collector account, users can access a free ticket and digital art gift by clicking the bottom right profile icon and selecting their collection. Presenting the art work on the app to an Art Fair employee at the entrance of each location will grant free access to the Art Fair.

    At the festival, attendees can also use the app to scan and authenticate the art in real time. This will take users to a page with information about the artwork and next steps on how to make a purchase. Then, customers can enter card information to easily buy pieces directly in the app.

    Aside from just the art, Art Fair Detroit will also feature exhibitions, installations, performances, music, parties, and panel discussions. The festival will take place at multiple locations including Newlab, the Boyer Campbell Building, the Detroit Design District Gallery, Belt Line, and the 1xRun Warehouse Building.

    A full schedule, map, and list of artists can be found at artclvb.xyz.

    You can download ArtClvb in the Apple App Store or Google Play App Store.

    Layla McMurtrie

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  • Best Bets: Twyla Tharp Dance, The Music of Motown and Runaway Radio

    Best Bets: Twyla Tharp Dance, The Music of Motown and Runaway Radio




    Breakfast is the most important meal of
    the day, and today is Better
    Breakfast Day
    , so we encourage you to get a better start on a day that will
    hopefully end with you checking out one of our best bets. Keep reading because
    this week, we’ve got season-opening programs, a documentary about a local radio
    station-turned-legend, and more.

    DACAMERA
    will open its 2024-25 season tonight, Thursday, September 26, at 7:30 p.m. with
    Takács
    Quartet and Jeremy Denk
    in concert at the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts.
    Takács Quartet will be making
    their first appearance with DACAMERA, playing Joseph Haydn’s String Quartet in
    C Major, Op. 54, No. 2, and Leoš Janáček’s String Quartet No. 1, dubbed the “Kreutzer
    Sonata” after the Leo Tolstoy novella that inspired it, while pianist and MacArthur
    “Genius” fellow Denk tackles Antonín
    Dvořák’s Piano Quintet in A Major, Op. 81, which has been called “easily
    one of the finest examples of late Romantic chamber music.
    ” Tickets for the
    performance are still available and can be purchased here for $46 to $76.

    click to enlarge

    Mei-Ann Chen and ROCO return to Miller Outdoor Theatre to perform ROCO’s 20th season-opening program.

    Photo by Violeta Alvarez

    ROCO’s full
    40-piece chamber orchestra, with three world premieres and a newly animated,
    rescored classic, will head over to Miller Outdoor Theatre on Friday,
    September 27, at 7:30 p.m. to present a spacey, season-opening program titled Remarkable.
    The program leads off the chamber orchestra’s 20th season, which you can learn
    more about here.
    Tickets
    to Friday night’s performance can be reserved here starting today,
    September 26, at 10 a.m., or you can plan to sit on the Hill without a
    ticket. As always, shows at Miller are free, and if you can’t make it, you can
    livestream this one on the Miller Outdoor Theatre website, YouTube channel, or
    Facebook page.

    Remarkable
    will be performed a second time at The Church
    of St. John the Divine
    the following night, Saturday, September 28, at 5 p.m.
    Tickets to this performance are pay-what-you-wish (with a suggested price of
    $35) and are available here. This
    performance will also be livestreamed for free on ROCO’s website, Facebook page, and YouTube channel.

    A modern-day witch living in the big
    city, played by Kim Novak, falls for a mere mortal, played by James Stewart, in
    Richard Quine’s Bell,
    Book and Candle
    – the premise of which served as an inspiration behind
    the classic American sitcom Bewitched (according
    to series’ creator Sol Saks
    ). On Friday, September 27, at 7:30 p.m., in
    honor of the 100th anniversary of Surrealism, The
    Menil Collection
    will host an outdoor screening of the 1958 rom-com. Why
    this picture? Because the film, based on a play by John Van Druten, is set in Julius
    Carlebach’s Carlebach Gallery, a favorite of the Surrealists and the place
    where Novak’s witchy Gillian Holroyd works. Moon Rooster Tacos
    and Kona Shaved Ice trucks will be
    on-site during the free, open-to-all screening.

    Celebrate the 60th anniversary of a
    pioneering dancemaker’s company on Saturday, September 28, at 7:30 p.m. when Performing Arts Houston presents Twyla
    Tharp Dance
    at the Wortham
    Theater Center
    . The program, part of the Tudor Family Dance Series, will
    feature three Tharp-choreographed works, including two new works – “a
    male solo of breadth and power
    ” called Brel,
    its title a nod to its music by Belgian vocalist Jacques Brel, and The Ballet Master, a contemporary meets
    Baroque piece with appearances by characters from Don Quixote and music by Simeon
    ten Holt
    and Antonio Vivaldi – and a revival of Ocean’s Motion, a 1975 piece for five dancers set to music by Chuck
    Berry that Tharp herself described as “cool.”
    Tickets can be purchased here
    for $29 to $99.

    Berry
    Gordy Jr. founded Motown Records (then Tamla Records) in 1959
    , and the
    label produced music that is beloved to this day. Houston Symphony will bring Motown
    classics from acts like The Supremes, Stevie Wonder, and The Jackson 5 to Jones
    Hall on Saturday, September 28, at 7:30 p.m. during Ain’t
    No Mountain High Enough: The Music of Motown
    . Conductor Steven Reineke will
    lead the Symphony, which will be joined by vocalists Capathia Jenkins, Ryan Shaw, Chelsea
    Cymone, Michael Dixon, and Raven Johnson. The concert will be presented a
    second time on Sunday, September 29, at 2 p.m., a performance which will also
    be livestreamed. Tickets to either in-hall performance can be purchased here
    for $52 to $130, or you can buy access to the livestream here for $20.

    Ethel Smyth’s 1910 composition, “The
    March of the Women,” became “the
    true anthem of the suffrage movement
    ,” with Smyth saying of it, “If
    I have contrived to get into my music anything of the spirit which makes this
    movement the finest thing I have ever known in my life, then perhaps the March
    may in some way be worthy of your acceptance.
    ” On Saturday, September 28,
    at 8 p.m., the Houston Pride Band will
    open their season with a program of music that seeks to celebrate those
    movements and activists, like Smyth and the suffrage movement, that have fought
    for equality and justice during Power to the People
    at the MATCH. Tickets to the program are
    available here
    for $5 (for children 12 and under) to $15.

    One way to run afoul of the corrupt San
    Jacinto County Sheriff’s Office under Humpy Parker – so corrupt it inspired a
    book and TV movie, 1989’s Terror on
    Highway 59
    – was to display a KLOL sticker on your car. On Wednesday,
    October 2, at 7:30 p.m., you can learn what made Houston’s progressive radio
    station so popular, beloved, and dangerous during a screening of Runaway
    Radio: The Rise and Fall of KLOL FM
    at Alta Arts. Mike McGuff, the filmmaker/local
    blogger behind the documentary, has described KLOL as a “beacon,”
    a pre-internet place for “wild
    programming and escapism
    ” known for its personalities and stunts. Tickets to
    the screening, followed by a Q&A, are available here
    for $25. (If you can’t make it, you can always stream it.)

    Backstage shenanigans take center stage
    on Wednesday, October 2, at 7:30 p.m. when the Alley Theatre opens Michael Frayn’s 1982
    three-act farce Noises Off. Elizabeth Bunch, who plays Dotty
    Otley in the show, which makes three stops in the life of the play-within-the-play,
    recently told the Houston Press that “every
    production is its own kind of journey
    ,” saying that “it
    doesn’t matter how many times you see this play, every production is going to
    be different and frankly every night could be different because of the
    electricity in the air.
    ” Performances are scheduled to continue at 7:30
    p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 8 p.m. Fridays, 2:30 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and
    2 and 7 p.m. Sundays through October 27. Tickets are available here for $29 to $105.

    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Free Will Astrology (Sept. 18-24)

    Free Will Astrology (Sept. 18-24)

    ARIES (March 21-April 19): Few of the vegetables grown in the 21st century are in their original wild form. Many are the result of crossbreeding carried out by humans. The intention is to increase the nutritional value of the food, boost its yield, improve its resistance to insect predators, and help it survive weather extremes. I invite you to apply the metaphor of crossbreeding to your life in the coming months. You will place yourself in maximum alignment with cosmic rhythms if you conjure up new blends. So be a mix master, Aries. Favor amalgamations and collaborations. Transform jumbles and hodgepodges into graceful composites. Make “alloy” and “hybrid” your words of power.

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20): “All I ask is the chance to prove that money can’t make me happy,” quipped comedian Spike Milligan. I propose we make that your running joke for the next eight months. If there was ever a time when you could get rich more quickly, it would be between now and mid-2025. And the chances of that happening may be enhanced considerably if you optimize your relationship with work. What can you do now to help ensure you will be working at a well-paying job you like for years to come?

    GEMINI (May 21-June 20): The World Health Organization says that 3.5 billion people in the world don’t have access to safe toilets; 2.2 billion live without safe drinking water; 2 billion don’t have facilities in their homes to wash their hands with soap and water. But it’s almost certain that you don’t suffer from these basic privations. Most likely, you get all the water you require to be secure and healthy. You have what you need to cook food and make drinks. You can take baths or showers whenever you want. You wash your clothes easily. Maybe you water a garden. I bring this to your attention because now is an excellent time to celebrate the water in your life. It’s also a favorable time to be extra fluid and flowing and juicy. Here’s a fun riddle for you: What could you do to make your inner life wetter and better lubricated?

    CANCER (June 21-July 22): Cancerian rapper and actor Jaden Smith has won a few mid-level awards and has been nominated for a Grammy. But I was surprised that he said, “I don’t think I’m as revolutionary as Galileo, but I don’t think I’m not as revolutionary as Galileo.” If I’m interpreting his sly brag correctly, Jaden is suggesting that maybe he is indeed pretty damn revolutionary. I’m thrilled he said it because I love to see you Cancerians overcome your natural inclination to be overly humble and self-effacing. It’s OK with me if you sometimes push too far. In the coming weeks, I am giving you a license to wander into the frontiers of braggadocio.

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Research by psychologists at Queen’s University in Canada concluded that the average human has about 6,200 thoughts every day. Other studies suggest that 75% of our thoughts are negative, and 95% are repetitive. But here’s the good news, Leo: My astrological analysis suggests that the amount of your negative and repetitive thoughts could diminish in the coming weeks. You might even get those percentages down to 35% and 50%, respectively. Just imagine how refreshed you will feel. With all that rejuvenating energy coursing through your brain, you may generate positive, unique thoughts at an astounding rate. Take maximum advantage, please!

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You have probably heard the platitude, “Be cautious about what you wish for. You might get it.” The implied warning is that if your big desires are fulfilled, your life may change in unpredictable ways that require major adjustments. That’s useful advice. However, I have often found that the “major adjustments” necessary are often interesting and healing — strenuous, perhaps, but ultimately enlivening. In my vision of your future, Virgo, the consequences of your completed goal will fit that description. You will be mostly pleased with the adaptations you must undertake in response to your success.

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): The bird known as the gray-headed albatross makes long, continuous flights without touching down on the ground. I propose we nominate this robust traveler to be one of your inspirational animals in the coming months. I suspect that you, too, will be capable of prolonged, vigorous quests that unleash interesting changes in your life. I don’t necessarily mean your quests will involve literal long-distance travel. They may, but they might also take the form of vast and deep explorations of your inner terrain. Or maybe you will engage in bold efforts to investigate mysteries that will dramatically open your mind and heart.

    SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): You are in a good position and frame of mind to go hunting for a novel problem or two. I’m half-joking, but I’m also very serious. I believe you are primed to track down interesting dilemmas that will bring out the best in you and attract the educational experiences you need. These provocative riddles will ensure that boring old riddles and paltry hassles won’t bother you. Bonus prediction: You are also likely to dream up an original new “sin” that will stir up lucky fun.

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Your spinning and weaving abilities will be strong in the coming weeks. I predict that your knack for creating sturdy, beautiful webs will catch the resources and influences you require. Like a spider, you must simply prepare the scenarios to attract what you need, then patiently relax while it all comes to you. Refining the metaphor further, I will tell you that you have symbolic resemblances to the spiders known as cross orbweavers. They produce seven different kinds of silk, each useful in its own way — and in a sense, so can you. Your versatility will help you succeed in interesting ways.

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Capricorn basketball player JamesOn Curry had the briefest career of anyone who ever played in America’s top professional league. Around his birthday in 2010, while a member of the Los Angeles Clippers, he appeared on the court for 3.9 seconds — and never returned. Such a short-lived effort is unusual for the Capricorn tribe — and will not characterize your destiny in the coming months. I predict you will generate an intense outpouring of your sign’s more typical expressions: durability, diligence, persistence, tenacity, resilience, determination, resolve, and steadfastness. Ready to get underway in earnest?

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): It’s a good time for you to embrace the serpent, metaphorically speaking. You may even enjoy riding and playing with and learning from the serpent. The coming weeks will also be a favorable phase for you to kiss the wind and consult with the ancestors and wrestle with the most fascinating questions you know. So get a wild look in your eyes, dear Aquarius. Dare to shed mediocre pleasures so you can better pursue spectacular pleasures. Experiment only with smart gambles and high-integrity temptations, and flee the other kinds. P.S.: If you challenge the past to a duel (a prospect I approve of), be well-armed with the future.

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Panda bears don’t seem to enjoy having sex. The typical length of their mating encounters is from 30 seconds to two minutes. There was a dramatic exception to the rule in 2015, however. Lu Lu and Zhen Zhen, pandas living at the Sichuan Giant Panda Research Center in China, snuggled and embraced for 18 minutes. It was unprecedented. I encourage you, too, to break your previous records for tender cuddling and erotic play in the coming weeks. The longer and slower you go, the more likely it is you will generate spiritual epiphanies and awakenings.

    Homework: What can you do to boost your ability to have fun?

    Rob Brezsny

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  • Detroit photographer Elonte Davis aims his camera at the ‘Undercurrent’ of the city

    Detroit photographer Elonte Davis aims his camera at the ‘Undercurrent’ of the city

    Elonte Davis has been one of the hottest emerging photographers in Detroit for the last few years. His latest photography exhibit, Undercurrent, is an alluring photo essay that captures the character of Detroit through its vibrant people and everyday moments. Davis’s work has been known for its engaging imagery of the Black community in Detroit and Undercurrent is no different.

    “I’m surrounded by the Black community, I’m immersed in the Black community, I’m born and raised in Detroit, on the east side,” Davis says. “I’m just immersed in the culture of what Detroit is and growing up Black in Detroit in the urban area.”

    Davis is intentional in celebrating the Black experience in Detroit from the perspective of the people and neighborhoods that have been here thriving before gentrification.

    “That’s another part of Undercurrent, we’re the real Detroit, not the downtown Detroit,” he says. “Like the people that came in like, ‘Detroit is back,’ but the real Detroit is the undercurrent. We’re like, ‘Hey man, Detroit never went nowhere.’”

    The exhibit will stay evolving until its last week as Davis plans on including photographs weekly he’s taken himself and from youth photographer Brooklyn Wilson. Overall, Davis just wants attendees to find themselves in his work and feel seen. “I want the viewer to feel thoughtfulness,” he says. “First, I want them to feel appreciation, gratitude, love, celebration, feel valued.”

    Undercurrent is on view at the Irwin House Gallery, 2351 W. Grand Blvd., Detroit; irwinhousegallery.org. An artist’s talk is scheduled for 2-5 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 21 and a closing reception is plans for 5-10 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 28.

    Kahn Santori Davison

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  • Afro Nation partners with Detroit Pistons to bring a pop-up basketball court to festival

    Afro Nation partners with Detroit Pistons to bring a pop-up basketball court to festival

    The world’s largest Afrobeats festival is returning to Detroit — and this year, it’s collaborating with the Detroit Pistons.

    Afro Nation Detroit is combining music, art, food, and fashion with yet another aspect of culture — sports.

    Afro Nation Detroit announced plans to host a Pistons-themed activation area at the festival, featuring a “Pistons Home Court” basketball court and a Pistons art installation designed by local artists.

    The pop-up basketball court will give Afro Nation attendees the opportunity to shoot hoops throughout the day to “relive their nostalgic backyard basketball days,” adding an extra way to have fun at the event and maybe even meet some new friends.

    The court will be accompanied by a Pistons art installation featuring large letters spelling “PISTONS” painted by Detroit artists India Solomon, Conrad Egyir, Daniel Geanes, Rick Williams, Sheefy McFly, and Tony Whlgn.

    Each letter “embodies the essence of Detroit, basketball, and Africa,” according to a press release.

    Additionally, the Pistons will be gifting custom Detroit Pistons Bad Boys City Edition jerseys to select music artists performing at the festival. Each jersey will be personalized with the artist’s home country flags within the number patches, celebrating their diverse origins and symbolizing a meaningful connection to Detroit.

    “The Pistons are such an important part of Detroit culture, and we are honored to welcome their presence at Afro Nation Detroit,” Obi Asika, co-founder of Afro Nation, said in a statement. “The new custom jerseys will help foster a connection between the performers and this great city, and embrace the values of individual greatness and competitiveness that Afrobeats and sports share.”

    Earlier this year, Afro Nation organizers told Metro Times that they hope the festival, which unites Black music from across the globe, becomes a staple annual event in the city of Detroit.

    This year’s lineup features headliners like African hitmakers Rema, Omah Lay, Asake, and Ayra Starr, alongside Detroit-born rapper Kash Doll, American rapper Lil Wayne, Canadian R&B singer PartyNextDoor, and many more.

    Another Detroit art exhibit, titled The Stories of Us — which debuted earlier this year featuring 10 large-scale sculptures reflecting on the United States’ past, present, and future — will also be placed somewhere in the festival for attendees to view.

    The festival is set for Aug. 17-18 at Bedrock’s Douglass Site. Tickets to Afro Nation Detroit 2024 and more information are available at detroit.afronation.com.

    Layla McMurtrie

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  • Free Will Astrology (July 31-Aug. 6)

    Free Will Astrology (July 31-Aug. 6)

    ARIES (March 21-April 19): One meaning of the word “palette” is a flat board on which painters place a variety of pigments to apply to their canvas. What would be a metaphorical equivalent to a palette in your life? Maybe it’s a diary or journal where you lay out the feelings and ideas you use to craft your fate. Perhaps it’s an inner sanctuary where you retreat to organize your thoughts and meditate on upcoming decisions. Or it could be a group of allies with whom you commune and collaborate to enhance each other’s destinies. However you define your palette, Aries, I believe the time is right to enlarge its size and increase the range of pigments you can choose from.

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20): The star that Westerners call Arcturus has a different name for Indigenous Australians: Marpeankurrk. In their part of the world, it begins to rise before dawn in August. For the Boorong people of northwest Victoria, this was once a sign to hunt for the larvae of wood ants, which comprised a staple food for months. I bring this up, Taurus, because heavenly omens are telling me you should be on the lookout for new sources of sustenance and fuel. What’s your metaphorical equivalent of wood ant larvae?

    GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Seventy percent of the world’s macadamia nuts have a single ancestor: a particular tree in Queensland, Australia. In 1896, two Hawaiian brothers took seeds from this tree and brought them back to their homestead in Oahu. From that small beginning, Hawaiian macadamia nuts have come to dominate the world’s production. I foresee you soon having resemblances to that original tree, Gemini. What you launch in the coming weeks and months could have tremendous staying power and reach far beyond its original inspiration.

    CANCER (June 21-July 22): Ketchup flows at about 0.03 miles per hour. In 35 hours, it could travel about a mile. I think you should move at a similar speed in the coming days. The slower you go, the better you will feel. The more deeply focused you are on each event, and the more you allow the rich details to unfold in their own sweet time, the more successful you will be at the art of living. Your words of power will be incremental, gradual, and cumulative.

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Astrologer Chris Zydel says every sign has superpowers. In honor of your birthday season, I’ll tell you about those she attributes to you Leos. When you are at your best, you are a beacon of “joyful magnetism” who naturally exudes “irrepressible charisma.” You “shine like a thousand suns” and “strut your stuff with unabashed audacity.” All who are lucky enough to be in your sphere benefit from your “radiant spontaneity, bold, dramatic play, and whoo-hoo celebration of your creative genius.” I will add that of course you can’t always be a perfect embodiment of all these superpowers. But I suspect you are cruising through a phase when you are the next best thing to perfect.

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Virgo-born Friedrich August Kekule (1829–1896) transformed organic chemistry with his crucial discovery of the structure of carbon-based compounds. He had studied the problem for years. But his breakthrough realization didn’t arrive until he had a key dream while dozing. There’s not enough room here to describe it at length, but the image that solved the riddle was a snake biting its own tail. I bring this story to your attention, Virgo, because I suspect you could have practical and revelatory dreams yourself in the coming weeks. Daydream visions, too. Pay attention! What might be your equivalent to a snake biting its own tail?

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22): Please don’t succumb to numbness or apathy in the coming weeks. It’s crucial that you don’t. You should also take extreme measures to avoid boredom and cynicism. At the particular juncture in your amazing life, you need to feel deeply and care profoundly. You must find ways to be excited about as many things as possible, and you must vividly remember why your magnificent goals are so magnificent. Have you ruminated recently about which influences provide you with the spiritual and emotional riches that sustain you? I encourage you to become even more intimately interwoven with them. It’s time for you to be epic, mythic, even heroic.

    SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Historically, August has brought many outbreaks of empowerment. In August 1920, American women gained the right to vote. In August 1947, India and Pakistan wrested their independence from the British Empire’s long oppression. In August 1789, French revolutionaries issued the Declaration of the Rights of Man, a document that dramatically influenced the development of democracy and liberty in the Western world. In 1994, the United Nations established August 9 as the time to celebrate International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples. In 2024, I am officially naming August to be Scorpio Power Spot Month. It will be an excellent time to claim and/or boost your command of the niche that will nurture your authority and confidence for years to come.

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): August is Save Our Stereotypes Month for you Sagittarians. I hope you will celebrate by rising up strong and bold to defend our precious natural treasures. Remember that without cliches, platitudes, pigeonholes, conventional wisdom, and hackneyed ideas, life would be nearly impossible. JUST KIDDING! Everything I just said was a dirty lie. Here’s the truth. August is Scour Away Stereotypes Month for you Sagittarians. Please be an agent of original thinking and fertile freshness. Wage a brazen crusade against cliches, platitudes, pigeonholes, conventional wisdom, and hackneyed ideas.

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): You’re never too old or wise or jaded to jump up in the air with glee when offered a free gift. Right? So I hope you won’t be so bent on maintaining your dignity and composure that you remain poker-faced when given the chance to grab the equivalent of a free gift. I confess I am worried you might be unreceptive to the sweet, rich things coming your way. I’m concerned you might be closed to unexpected possibilities. I will ask you, therefore, to pry open your attitude so you will be alert to the looming blessings, even when they are in disguise.

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): A friend of a friend told me this story: One summer day, a guy he knew woke up at 5 a.m., meditated for a while, and made breakfast. As he gazed out his kitchen window, enjoying his coffee, he became alarmed. In the distance, at the top of a hill, a brush fire was burning. He called emergency services to alert firefighters. A few minutes later, though, he realized he had made an error. The brush fire was in fact the rising sun lighting up the horizon with its fiery rays. Use this as a teaching story in the coming days, Aquarius. Double-check your initial impressions to make sure they are true. Most importantly, be aware that you may initially respond with worry to events that are actually wonderful or interesting.

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): At least a million ships lie at the bottom of the world’s oceans, lakes, and rivers. Some crashed because of storms, and others due to battles, collisions, or human error. A shipwreck hunter named Sean Fisher estimates that those remains hold over $60 billion worth of treasure. Among the most valuable are the old Spanish vessels that sank while carrying gold, silver, and other loot plundered from the Americas. If you have the slightest inkling to launch adventures in search of those riches, I predict the coming months will be an excellent tine. Alternately, you are likely to generate good fortune for yourself through any version of diving into the depths in quest of wealth in all of its many forms.

    Homework: What message would you like to send your 12-year-old self?

    Rob Brezsny

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  • Belle Isle Art Fair returns to Detroit with renowned artists and new activations

    Belle Isle Art Fair returns to Detroit with renowned artists and new activations

    No one can deny that Belle Isle is a gem to Detroit year-round, but the Belle Isle Art Fair is a time when it really shines.

    The annual event returns August 3-4, offering art activities for all ages and welcoming some of Detroit’s best creative minds alongside artists from across the country.

    Artists will gather around Belle Isle’s James Scott Memorial Fountain to offer work ranging from under $20 to over $10,000 in various mediums, including painting, printmaking, woodworking, metalwork, ceramics, jewelry, textiles, and more.

    “There’s really nothing more iconically Detroit than a sunny summer day on Belle Isle,” the art fair’s director Mark Loeb said in a press release. “The Belle Isle Art Fair is a perfect way to revisit and enjoy Belle Isle, to meet and learn from artists in person, purchase their work and express your own creativity through art projects and wonderful music, not to mention enjoy all the activities the beautiful island has to offer.”

    This year’s Belle Isle Art Fair poster was created by Detroit-area artist Ashley Menth, who won last year’s first Belle Isle Poster Contest. Menth is known for her hyper-colorful, impressionistic landscapes, especially those of Belle Isle. Her vision of Belle Isle’s McArthur Bridge against a pink sky won the contest, and 50 signed and numbered copies of the poster will be available at the festival.

    The artist will also be displaying original artwork and additional prints for sale.

    A new addition to this year’s fair is the Secret Art Garden — an opportunity to relax in Adirondack chairs, see art, and learn how to engage with the outdoors. The area will feature programs on birding, beekeeping, and the beauty of urban trees, with participants including The USDA Forest Service, Belle Isle Nature Center, Detroit Bird Alliance, Detroit Parks and Recreation, Michigan Wildflower Farm, Detroit Wildflower Nursery, and the Detroit Food Co-op.

    Another special highlight of this year’s event is the Heritage Artist Tent, which will host well-known Detroit-area artists who have “long-standing stellar reputations and do not often participate in art fairs,” according to a press release.

    Notable artists participating in this year’s art fair include Charlene Uresy, who paints colorful designs based on African symbols on reclaimed furniture, and Donald Calloway, known in Detroit for his vibrant masks and sculptures. Renowned jewelry artist Milton Bennett will also be present, along with Jimmy King, known for wearable African-inspired textiles.

    The Belle Isle Art Fair also partners with an array of local organizations to offer hands-on art for people of all ages. Activities include paper mosaic art projects with the DIA, quick-drying clay with the Marshall M. Fredericks Sculpture Museum, animal art with The Detroit Zoo, and book giveaways from The Detroit Public Library. Plus, the Mint Artists Guild will feature the work of young emerging artists from metro Detroit for sale and offer more hands-on art activities.

    The festival will also feature food trucks and booths, as well as musicians performing throughout the fair. Performances include folk rock artist Mark Reitenga, and Vladimir Gorodkin, who plays the Tsimbali, a string instrument similar to an autoharp from his native country Ukraine.

    The Belle Isle Art Fair will run from 10 a.m.-7 p.m. on Saturday and 11 a.m.-5 p.m. on Sunday.

    Admission and parking is free. A Michigan State Park pass is required to enter Belle Isle and can be purchased for $11.

    For more information, see belleisleartfair.com.

    Layla McMurtrie

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  • Best Bets: Bastille Day, Shōgun and The Wizard of Oz

    Best Bets: Bastille Day, Shōgun and The Wizard of Oz




    It’s been quite the week, huh?
    Post-Beryl, we hope everyone is safe and well, and we wish you all working electricity
    and Wi-Fi, air conditioning and refrigeration, and (hopefully) a well-deserved break
    from recovery efforts. If you were lucky enough to come through unscathed, or
    just need a place to go with working AC, we’ve put together a list of this
    coming week’s best bets. Keep reading for musicals, classical music, a
    non-American holiday celebration and more.

    One of the most beloved animated Disney
    films-turned-musical will open tonight, July 11, at 7:30 p.m. when Broadway at the Hobby Center presents The Lion King.
    Peter Hargrave, who’s playing the
    villainous Scar in the national tour, recently told the Houston Press that The Lion King is “one
    of those incredible stories that means something different to you in your
    childhood than it does as an adult
    ,” adding that though “the
    adversity
    ” in the show can be scare for kids, he thinks “that
    what children experience most of all is the potential of what a life can
    become.
    ” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays,
    8 p.m. Fridays, 2 and 8 p.m. Saturdays, and 1 and 6:30 p.m. Sundays through
    August 4. Tickets are available here for $35
    to $140.

    The
    Wizard of Oz
    is an American classic, and many have tried to explain why, including
    Salman Rushdie, who noted that the
    1939 MGM film “is
    that great rarity, a film that improves on the good book from which it came.

    On Friday, July 12, at 7:30 p.m. you can see a reimagining of L. Frank Baum’s “optimistic
    American fable about one group of friends’ path toward happiness
    ” when Queensbury Theatre opens their
    main stage production of The Wizard of Oz.
    And of course, it will include the music you love from the MGM film.
    Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Thursdays and Fridays, 2 p.m. and 7:30
    p.m. Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays through July 28. Tickets can be purchased here for $30 to $65.

    click to enlarge

    Get an early start on Halloween at Insomnia Gallery’s Summer Slashers – Horror Art Show + Night Market at Hardy & Nance Studios.

    Photo by Natalie de la Garza

    We are officially 112 days from
    Halloween, so there’s no better time to celebrate all things horror, which you
    can do on Friday, July 12, from 8 p.m. to midnight when Insomnia Gallery presents their
    annual Summer
    Slashers – Horror Art Show + Night Market
    at Hardy & Nance Studios. The art
    show will showcase the works of local artists, all putting their unique spins
    on different scary movies and TV shows, while the horror-themed night market
    will feature vendors that specialize in spooky. Of course, you can also expect complimentary
    drinks from City Orchard, Equal Parts Brewing, Bad Astronaut Brewing Co. and Eureka Heights Brewery as well as
    food from Boom Box Tacos. The show is
    free and there’s no ticket required for entry.

    In 1938, Aaron Copland halted his work
    on Billy the Kid to compose a piece
    of music for a high school orchestra
    , and the result, An Outdoor Overture, will open the program of the first of four Summer
    Symphony Nights
    over the next two weekends at Miller Outdoor Theatre on
    Friday, July 12, at 8:30 p.m. when the Houston
    Symphony
    returns to Miller to present American
    Masterworks
    . Guest conductor Kellen
    Gray
    will lead the Symphony in the all-American program which, in addition
    to Copland, will also include George Gershwin’s
    Catfish Row, a concert suite from Porgy and Bess, and Florence Price’s Symphony No. 3 in C
    minor. Tickets for the free show can be reserved here starting
    today, July 11, at 10 a.m., though you can always sit on the no-ticket-required
    Hill
    instead.

    click to enlarge

    Ian Lewis and Danny Hayes in Main Street Theater’s production of The Woman in Black.

    Photo by Andrew Ruthven

    There’s nothing better than a ghost
    story in the summer, and Main Street
    Theater
    has one for you: The Woman in Black,
    opening on Saturday, July 13, at 7:30 p.m. The play, adapted by Stephen
    Mallatratt from a novel by Susan Hill, is about a man named Arthur Kipps, who’s
    sure his family is cursed. Danny Hayes, who plays the actor Mr. Kipps hires to
    help tell his story, told the Houston Press the play is “really
    unsettling
    ,” but that it is “not
    just scary for scary’s sake or trying to be scary with silly jump scares
    ,” noting
    that the characters “are
    very human
    ” and the play is “so
    well crafted.
    ” Performances are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Thursdays through
    Saturdays and Sundays at 3 p.m. through August 11. Tickets are available here for $39 to $59.

    For the second of four Summer
    Symphony Nights
    at Miller
    Outdoor Theatre
    , the Houston
    Symphony
    , under the baton of conductor Gonzalo Farias, will turn to a
    double bill of Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky on Saturday, July 13, at 8:30 p.m.
    during Tchaikovsky’s
    Symphony No. 5
    . William
    Grant Still
    ’s “Summerland” and Tchaikovsky’s Violin Concerto in D major,
    Opus 35 (featuring violinist Blake Pouliot)
    will set the stage for the concert’s finale: Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony
    which, though “not explicitly
    nationalistic
    ,” has “a distinctively
    Russian flavor
    ” and “stands
    as one of [the composer’s] most loved large-scale creations.
    ” You can
    reserve free tickets in the covered seating area here beginning on
    Friday, July 12, at 10 a.m. or you can plan to sit on the no-ticket-required Hill.


    Shōgun, “FX’s
    most watched
    show ever (based on global hours streamed)
    ,” is “one
    of the year’s most outstanding shows
    ” and has been described as “rollicking,
    violent, transcendently silly, often incisive, and most importantly, totally
    legible.
    ” We’ll know within a week whether or not the show, based on a
    novel by James Clavell, will nab an Emmy nod for Best Drama Series (an award it
    could easily win), but on Sunday, July 14, at 2 p.m. the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, will welcome
    local filmmaker Emmanuel Osei-Kuffour, who directed the eighth episode of the
    series, during Shōgun: A Director’s Perspective. Osei-Kuffour
    will introduce the episode, titled “The Abyss of Life,” which will be screened
    and then followed by a Q&A. Admission is free and you can get your ticket here.

    The 14th of July is Bastille Day, a public
    holiday in France that commemorates the day Parisians stormed the Bastille – a
    prison that at one time held Voltaire (as well as the Marquis de Sade) – and
    kicked off the French Revolution. You can find a little “liberté, egalité, fraternité”
    right here in the Bayou City on Sunday, July 14, at 5 p.m. when the Consulate General of France
    in Houston
    hosts Celebrate
    Bastille Day
    at Rice University Stadium.
    Francophiles can enjoy a showcase of sports (remember, the Olympics are in Paris this year),
    music, space and cuisine during the festivities. We’ll also go out on a limb
    and bet you’ll hear at least one rendition of “La Marseillaise.” Admission is
    free, but registration here
    is mandatory.

    Natalie de la Garza

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  • Last-minute appeal halts demolition of Dabls African Bead Museum building in Detroit

    Last-minute appeal halts demolition of Dabls African Bead Museum building in Detroit

    A large, colorful building that was intended to be incorporated into the Dabls MBAD African Bead Museum dodged a scheduled emergency demolition Tuesday after the structure’s owner filed a last-minute appeal.

    Artist Olayami Dabls, the 2022 Kresge Eminent Artist, will make his case for saving the partially collapsed building at a hearing at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday before the Detroit Department of Appeals and Hearings.

    Dabls filed the appeal on Saturday, just in time to initiate a hearing.

    A couple dozen protesters gathered outside the building Tuesday at the corner of Grand River and Vinewood, begging the city to call off the demolition.

    City officials said the appeal — not the protesters — prompted a pause in the demolition.

    At Wednesday’s hearing, Dabls will have to make the case that the city’s Buildings, Safety Engineering, and Environmental Department (BSEED) erred in declaring the building was an imminent risk to the public. The public can tune into the meeting on Zoom, according to the city’s website.

    Under the city’s charter, residents have a right to appeal administrative decisions.

    If Dabls is unsuccessful, the city may move forward with the demolition. City officials could also reach an agreement with the Dabls to make quick repairs.

    Dabls says a group has offered to make “emergency repairs” to save the building, which is adorned with beads, artwork, African symbols, and jagged mirrors. The building was intended to become a full-scale museum featuring a collection of African beads, some hundreds of years old, but unforeseen circumstances including the COVID-19 pandemic put the plans on hold, Dabls says. The building is adjacent to the main Dabls MBAD African Bead Museum, and the demolition wouldn’t impact the main structure.

    click to enlarge

    Lee DeVito

    Detroit’s Dabls MBAD African Bead Museum is part of a sprawling complex across two blocks.

    “We have had a massive plan that is 18 years in the making,” Dabls tells Metro Times. “We never had the chance to show that this building was part of a long-term development before it was interrupted by COVID and other things that took place that were out of my control.”

    Dabls says the city decided to demolish the building without talking with him about his plans.

    “They were so adamant about destroying the building,” he says. “We always had a plan, but they never entertained it.”

    After receiving a $500 blight ticket, Dabls feared the building would be razed and launched a crowdfunding campaign to raise $400,000 for repairs. So far, he has raised $5,845, as of Tuesday afternoon.

    BSEED Director David Bell previously told Metro Times that the demolition was ordered following an inspection that found the building was dangerous.

    “Since the issue was brought to our attention, we have inspected the building and determined it to be in a state of significant collapse and must be taken down immediately,” Bell said. “Based on our inspection, we have issued an emergency demolition order for this building.”

    He added, “The building has deteriorated to the point it is no longer salvageable and poses an immediate threat to public safety. Our primary concern is the health, safety and welfare of residents and public who may visit the area.”

    Dabls argues the building is indeed salvageable.

    “We’re going to renovate it,” he says.

    Steve Neavling

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