Subcontinental Colors

In its FotoFest nod and a concurrent artifacts exhibition, the MFAH highlights the quirkiness of mid-century India, and the unique majesty of its distant past.

300 dpi 12 x 18 cm Raghubir Singh_Fruit Seller and a Boy with a Child Copyright 2017 Succession Raghubir Singh

India’s living history and emerging future is the theme of this year’s FotoFest Biennial, with works by nearly 50 photographers and new-media artists from India and the Indian diaspora on view in The Silos at Sawyer Yards, Winter Street and Silver Street Studios and the Asia Society Texas Center.

Keep Reading Show less
Art+Culture

Basketball Diaries

Houston sports and music scribe Shea Serrano’s new roundball book has some presidential prestige, but what might the Rockets have to say about it?

Teen_Wolf_Draft

This fall, don’t be surprised to see the name Shea Serrano all over your TV. Not only is the local writer’s first book, 2015’s The Rap Year Book: The Most Important Rap Song From Every Year Since 1979, Discussed, Debated, and Deconstructed, being turned into a documentary series for AMC, it is also being executive-produced by hip-hop royalty, The Roots’ Questlove and Black Thought. On another, as-yet-to-be-determined channel, you might just find the as-yet-untitled Shae Serrano Show, a sitcom drawn from real life. Think Everybody Loves Raymond starring a Mexican-American former 8th-grade science teacher turned sportswriter living with his wife and three sons in the environs of Meyerland. “There’s no guarantee that anybody will pick it up for production,” says Serrano, who spent his Christmas holiday writing the pilot. “But if they do, you should expect Denzel Washington to play me.”

Keep Reading Show less
Art+Culture

The Sound of Music

Celebrating differences and promoting inclusion, the ReelAbilities Festival’s closing-night concert spotlights music’s power to unite.

Editorially best

Now in its sixth year, the ReelAbilities: Houston Film and Arts Festival celebrates the lives and talents of people living with physical and/or mental disabilities. Throughout the next week, ReelAbilities screens more than a dozen award-winning films about a variety of subjects — dating apps for the blind, a swim team of teens on the autism spectrum, and dogs trained to assist soldiers with PTSD — at the Edwards Greenway Plaza theater, and also showcases works by disabled artists at Celebration Company (4131 S. Braeswood Blvd.). The festival’s closing-night event, ReelMusic, is Febraury 22 at White Oak Music, where professional players drawn from the city’s vibrant jazz and blues scene invite musicians with disabilities to join them onstage for an all-inclusive jam session.

Keep Reading Show less
Art+Culture