Sprawling New Mural Honors Civil-Rights Leader During Hispanic Heritage Month

Sprawling New Mural Honors Civil-Rights Leader During Hispanic Heritage Month

Artist Lemus at work

The latest project from UP Art Studio, a Houston-based consulting firm that curates and implements public art to cultivate civic pride, will be unveiled tomorrow in the Greater Northside District. In honor of Hispanic Heritage Month, the new 3,000-square-foot mural, created by Gelson Lemus (aka w3r3on3), honors the late Judge Alfred J. Hernandez.


Hernandez, a child of migrant farm workers from Mexico, spent his career advocating for Latinx citizens before passing in 2010 at age 93. He was a civil rights leader, the first Hispanic judge in Harris County and a three-term president of LULAC. The tunnel on North Main Street was named after him in 1997, and now, Lemus — also an immigrant who has found opportunity in Houston — has painted murals on each side of the Hernandez Tunnel's south entrance.

"The tunnel has been converted into a beautiful landmark that honors our father and his contributions to the betterment of the Hispanic community and creates a notable gateway to the Near Northside," said the judge's son, Alfred J. Hernandez, Jr., in a statement.

Images and motifs depicted include plumeria flowers (Hernandez's favorite), a portrait of the judge, and paintings of newspaper clippings featuring headlines of civil rights breakthroughs. The project has been in the works since 2015, and to celebrate its completion, UP Art Studio and Lemus will host a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 500 North Main St. tomorrow at 10am.

People + Places

Jerod and Madison Durst, Bailey Bell, Hayden Layne

PER THE FABULOUS annual tradition, Cotton Holdings and its founder, Pete Bell, opened Rodeo season in lavish style with its VIP bash at the 50th Annual World’s Championship Bar-B-Que Contest, also known simply as “Cook-Off.” The food-and-drink-savvy festival-within-a-festival, which kicks off the Houston Livestock Show and Rodeo, draws cowboys and cowgirls in designer duds — think denim and diamonds and perfectly fitted Stetsons — for raucously good fun.

Keep Reading Show less
People + Places

Stephanie Chou, Mandy Kao, Brigitte Kalai, Pitsami Norm, Mable Tang, Alice Mao Brams, Cindy Cheng, and Sippi Khurana

ALWAYS A STUNNING evening, Asia Society Texas' Tiger Ball celebrated the beauty and diversity of Asian culture. Gold-flecked tablescapes, plants and gowns ensured that the glam, tented affair was absolutely glimmering — just like Tiger Ball chairs Chinhui and Eddie Allen and Heidi and David Gerger, as the event raised an impressive $1.5 million for AST's efforts to build a more inclusive community in Houston.

Keep Reading Show less
People + Places