Exhibit Celebrates Creators of Different Abilities — and How Making Art Empowers Them

Exhibit Celebrates Creators of Different Abilities — and How Making Art Empowers Them

Sevy Marie Eicher and her paint-on-wood piece 'Cat Bird Lord of the Fly'

ON SUNDAY, FEB. 6, at Sabine Street Studios, the ReelAbilities Houston Film & Arts Festival kicks off with ReelArt, a delightful exhibition of artists from Celebration Company, an entrepreneurial employment program for adults with disabilities.


At Celebration Company, participants explore art making in several mediums and earn a commission on sales of their art, all of which is reasonably priced and available to view on the Celebration Company website.

This year’s ReelArt exhibit features works by Bulgarian-born Sevy Eicher, an 18-year-old with Down syndrome, who is also an internationally collected artist. Before being adopted by Houston couple Joey and Lisa Eicher, Sevy, who is non-verbal, had never gone to school, never been to a doctor, and lived only in institutions and temporary homes. While the trauma of those experiences initially prevented Sevy from fully trusting her new family, once she began making art — at first working beside Lisa, who is a writer, and then on her own with paint, brushes and canvases — Sevy became more open, trusting and joyful.

Despite, or maybe because of her success in selling her work, Sevy is a relentless experimenter, infusing her work with an ever widening range of emotional content by combining bright, electric colors and pastel hues with recognizable shapes and figures, and occasionally letters of the alphabet (“AAAA”). Meanwhile, the often humorous titles of her paintings (“Cat Bird Lord Of The Fly,” “Pink Punk Scribble”) come courtesy of little brother Radko, who according to Sevy’s Instagram, “always sees very specific things in her work.”

Like Sevy, other Celebration Company artists have benefited from the transformative power of art, and describe feeling empowered, calm and focused while painting, taking photographs, or working with fused glass. Thanks to ReelArt and the organizers of the ReelAbilities Houston Film and Arts Festival, we get to see and enjoy the resulting work and discover how much talent and skill exists among persons with disabilities.

The ReelArt opening reception takes place Feb. 6, 2022. Free valet parking will be available that day for accessibility. The exhibit runs through March 25, 2022.

'Doors Everywhere' by Harry Samelson

'Green Green' by Jacob Sulton

Elyse Brandt's 'Resting Turtles'

Art + Entertainment

Októ will have a lively bar like the one at Doris Metropolitan, pictured here. (photo by Kirsten Gilliam)

AFTER YEARS OF operating solid, Israeli-influenced concepts — Doris Metropolitan on Shepherd, and Badolina and Hamsa in Rice Village — Sof Hospitality is set to debut its latest concept in Montrose Collective this summer. Surprise, this time it’s Mediterranean cuisine!

Keep Reading Show less
Food

“DO YOU KNOW how a river forms?” is the question that begins Houston author Vaishnavi Patel’s new book, Goddess of the River. The voice belongs to Ganga, goddess of India’s Ganges river, who has been transformed against her will by Lord Shiva from “a tributary of the cosmic ocean” into the physical form of a mere winding river, with no path to the heavens, only the sea. Later, Ganga runs afoul of a powerful sage who transforms her yet again into a human, and as it happens in myths, things get complicated.

Keep Reading Show less
Art + Entertainment