Sasha Cooke (photo by Dario Acosta)

THIS WEEKEND, THE Houston Grand Opera presents Dame Ethel Smyth’s The Wreckers, an overlooked opera composed between 1902 and 1904 by an overlooked English composer, who famously took a two-year break from music to commit herself to the women’s suffrage movement.
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'Blackboard,' 1969, © Estate of Philip Guston, courtesy Hauser & Wirth

FOR THE AMERICAN artist Philip Guston, born Phillip Goldstein in 1913 to Jewish parents who fled the pogroms in the Ukraine for the relative safety of Canada and later settled in Los Angeles, abstraction was one of many visual languages he pulled from over the course of a lifetime of creating his intensely autobiographical, and often socially conscious art. That lifetime of work is beautifully presented in Philip Guston Now, which opened Sunday at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and is on view through Jan. 15, 2023. It’s the first retrospective of Guston’s work in more than 20 years.

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Julie Kent (photo by Jayme Thornton, courtesy of The Washington Ballet)

THE BELOVED STANTON Welch of the Houston Ballet officially has a new counterpart in Julie Kent, named the company's first-ever co-artistic director today.

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