Home for the Holidays

The theater district declares triumph over Harvey, delivering song and dance — despite storm-related setbacks — to warm hearts this season.

Perhaps the phrase is overused, especially in these post-Harvey days, but there’s no better way to put it: The show must go on. Performing arts companies across Houston are determined to bring warmth and familiarity to the holidays through beloved productions that have become tradition.

Keep Reading Show less
Art+Culture

A Day in the Life of the Arts

The arts culture of Houston never stops — from rap shows that bound into the wee hours of a new day to a solitary painter putting the finishing touches on a canvas, wine glass at hand, just before midnight. Five photographers take on the task of capturing the everyday wonders of art in houston, over the 24 hours of Wednesday, Oct. 4, 2017. What they find, just weeks after Harvey, is a creative class quickly regrouping and overcoming, doing what it does best — challenging conventions, breaking down barriers and seeking to lift up the human spirit. Produced by Patrick Magee and Chris Becker;

Fulton Davenport, Jhane Hoang, Shannon O'Hara, Daniel Ortiz and Todd Spoth
Editors’ Note: There are signs everywhere that Houston, and its arts community, are beginning their comeback as the city moves into a new phase of the pandemic. Lest we forget, artists faced huge struggles before, in the wake of Hurricane Harvey not so long ago. Just weeks after the storm, we chronicled their resilience in our first-ever “Day in the Life of the Arts” photo essay.

Untitled-23

Keep Reading Show less
Art+Culture

Smooth Operators

They might be young, but the musicians of Mind Shrine know how to find a slick old-school groove, and a growing audience.

Anthony Rathbun

Fifteen seconds. That’s how long it takes the breezy track “Goodbye” from the South Houston smooth-funk pop quartet Mind Shrine to elevate listeners. Recorded locally at SugarHill studios, the song kicks off with a drumbeat and 14 seconds of bubbly bass before frontwoman Krystina Wilson provides liftoff with Sade-like verve. “My intentions were not bad, but I pretended not to try,” Wilson croons, stretching syllables around the shimmering sound of guitars.

Keep Reading Show less
Art+Culture