• Austin
  • / DFW
  • / Houston
  • / San Antonio
  • / West Texas
  • / SUBSCRIBE TO ACTX
  • Home
  • Visual Art

    Visual Art

    See All

    Performative and All-encompassing: David-Jeremiah: The Fire This Time

    Gallery Row: A Seasonal Spotlight on Six Texas Galleries

    Accumulating Histories: Francesca Fuchs Redefines a Breathing Archive at the Menil

  • Gallery Row

    Gallery Row

    See All

    Gallery Row: A Seasonal Spotlight on Six Texas Galleries

    Gallery Row: A Seasonal Spotlight on Six Texas Galleries

    Gallery Row: A Seasonal Spotlight on Six Texas Galleries

  • Dance

    Dance

    See All

    Performa/Dance Marks Their 10th Anniversary with ‘ANTHROPOCENE’

    Concert Trucks and Onstage Dinners: Performing Arts Houston offers its most varied schedule yet

    Unbind Your Imagination: TITAS/Dance Unbound invites global dance into Dallas for 2025-26 season

  • Music

    Music

    See All

    Performania: A Spotlight on Texas Stages

    Concert Trucks and Onstage Dinners: Performing Arts Houston offers its most varied schedule yet

    Twists of Fate: Myths, Drama, and Phenomenal Voices in Ars Lyrica Houston’s New Season

  • Theater

    Theater

    See All

    Performania: A Spotlight on Texas Stages

    Concert Trucks and Onstage Dinners: Performing Arts Houston offers its most varied schedule yet

    Outcast Heroes and Storybook Musicals: Broadway Across Texas

  • More
    • Film
    • Books
    • Texas Studio
    • Show Up
    • Texas Lens
    • Archives
      • Acting in Texas
      • Coming Home
      • Curating in Texas
      • Design in Texas
      • Features
      • It Happened in Texas
      • Latinx Theater
      • Lone Star Stories
      • Performania
      • Top Ten

MIRÓ QUARTET: A Texas Beethoven Cycle & More

Chris Johnson·August 29, 2013
When violinist William Fedkenheuer steps onto the stage this month with his colleagues in the Austin-based Miró Quartet for a series of six concerts at the Butler School of Music at UT-Austin (Sept. 6-8 & 27-29), he will achieve a distinction that few other professionals can claim. He will be one of the few living violinists who have performed all sixteen of Ludwig van Beethoven's string quartets for two violins, viola and cello as both a first and second violinist.
AustinMusic

Playing With Words

JOHN DeMERS·August 29, 2013
For lovers of Shakespeare and Molière, Ibsen and Chekhov, Miller and Williams, declaring our time a new Golden Age of the playwright might seem delusional, or at best, a flourish of hyperbole from some theater’s marketing department. But if you ask the artistic directors of some of the most respected ensembles in Texas, they’ll assure you such claims are hardly ridiculous.
Theater

The Lone Star State en Pointe

Nichelle Suzanne·August 29, 2013
No, ballet wasn’t born in Texas. But, in accord with the proverbial Law of Attraction, it got here as fast as it could. Since the arrival of a troupe of traveling Russians during a time when even Hollywood movies were still, literally, finding their voice, the art and practice of ballet has been nurtured by Texans, who support not one, but three multi-million-dollar-budget ballet companies, and a host of smaller, but no less notable, organizations.
DanceLone Star Stories

Undermain at 30

Lauren Smart·August 29, 2013
The logo of the Undermain Theatre adorns a sandwich board at the edge of the Deep Ellum neighborhood in Dallas. The lone black and yellow marker beckons curious theatergoers to venture below Main Street for shows they can't see anywhere else. Undermain Theatre celebrates its 30th year with a lineup of three brand new plays, continuing its lifelong commitment to presenting original plays that challenge audiences. Whether it's an edgy new work by David Rabe or a scintillating production of August Strindberg or Harold Pinter, the consistently high quality of work at the Undermain Theatre is unrivaled in the local scene.
Dallas/Ft WorthTheater

No Limits in the Book of Mormon

Lauren Smart·August 29, 2013
A centerpiece of the first act of The Book of Mormon is the song, "Hasa Diga Eebowai." This Ugandan phrase punctuates the show's irreverent version of "Hakuna Matata," in which a tribe sings about AIDS, Africa, and telling God where he can stick his lightning bolts.
Theater

Space Painting

DANIELLE GEORGIOU·August 29, 2013
Jessica Lang paints movements in broad strokes, making her one of the most visually exciting choreographers in the dance world. Houston's Society of Performing Arts presents Jessica Lang Dance (JLD) on Sept. 20, following the TITAS presentation in Dallas on Sept. 14.
Dallas/Ft WorthDanceHouston

Energy Dance

Nancy Wozny·August 29, 2013
Forklift Dance Works founder Allison Orr, formerly fearful of heights, can now climb a power pole. Don't expect her to fix your electricity when it goes out, but she knows way more about energy than your average choreographer.
AustinDance

Open Season

Nancy Zastudil·August 29, 2013
Some people say ideas are a dime a dozen. The Idea Fund says they are $3,500 each and, with help from a special initiative of The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, it is putting that money directly into the hands of Texas artists. As a result, some of the state's most provocative or otherwise unexpected imaginings are being made real.
CultureDanceFilmMusicTheaterVisual Art

Eyes on Texas: Performing Arts (Sep 2013)

Nancy Wozny·August 29, 2013
Art show/Model Show is a multi-media, interactive, collaborative performance experiment from Kelli Bland, Meghan Adriel Dwyer, Michelle Keffer, Jorge Sermini and Elizabeth Doss based on their experiences as art models.
DanceEyes on TexasFilmMusicTheater

Performania

Nancy Wozny·August 29, 2013
Musings & Mumblings on Time-Based Art   IMAGE: Brock England and Nathan Jerkins in Hidden Room Theatre’s award-...
Theater

Insider Notes: September 2013

Nancy Wozny·August 29, 2013
WELL, HELLO TEXAS. If you are from Houston or Dallas, I hope you are happy to find us back on the stands under the big Texas umbrella. If you are from elsewhere, you might be wondering…Arts + Culture who? Great question. We started in Dallas/Fort Worth, expanded to Houston, and combined forces in quest of understanding what the rest of this great state was up to, art-wise. And here we are, in our inaugural issue of Arts + Culture Texas.
Editor's Remarksinsider notes

Natasha Bowdoin: In the Garden

Andy Amato·August 29, 2013
There are various kinds of fabrics and fabrications, health from metaphoric to material, structural to ideological, social to...
Dallas/Ft WorthReviewsVisual Art
1 … 188 189 190 191 192 … 265








  • Subscribe
  • About
  • Advertising
  • Distribution
  • Contact
© 2025 Arts and Culture Texas
Site by BNM
  • Home
  • Visual Art
  • Gallery Row
  • Dance
  • Music
  • Theater
  • More
    • Film
    • Books
    • Texas Studio
    • Show Up
    • Texas Lens
    • Archives
      • Acting in Texas
      • Coming Home
      • Curating in Texas
      • Design in Texas
      • Features
      • It Happened in Texas
      • Latinx Theater
      • Lone Star Stories
      • Performania
      • Top Ten
Type to search or hit ESC to close
See all results