Reflecting on Losses from the Winter Street Studios Fire, Erika Alonso Pops Up with New Paintings

Reflecting on Losses from the Winter Street Studios Fire, Erika Alonso Pops Up with New Paintings

Alonso, inset, and her acrylic-on-canvas painting 'Birds'

BASED IN HOUSTON, Cuban-American painter Erika Alonso is a self-taught, self-described “painterly painter,” with a playful and very idiosyncratic take on abstract expressionism, mark making, and automatism, where the artist works quickly and intuitively, relying upon the subconscious to guide the artistic process. Her work can be found in numerous private collections across the United States and Europe, including that of beloved Houston collector and art fanatic Lester Marks. On Friday, Sept 8., from 7-9pm at Lanecia Rouse Tinsley Gallery, Alise Art Group's Art House presents Alonso’s solo exhibition Birds Are People Too (And Other Thoughts . . . ).


It’s a new collection of attractive black and white acrylic paintings, filled with squiggly lines and mysterious shapes that will indeed remind the viewer of birds and the natural world, as well as the jumpy, interior life of an artist blessed and cursed with racing thoughts. Alonso’s paintings aren’t exactly sedate, but they don’t signal danger.

Created in the months after the tragic and senseless Winter Street Studios fire bombing, which destroyed Alonso’s studio and several of her artworks, Birds Are People Too is a testament to Alonso’s resiliency, and the innate ability of artists to bounce back even after unimaginable loss. (Nearly 100 artists were impacted by the fire.)

“These experiences led me back to where I started as an artist: the simplicity and contrast of black and white,” says Alonso in a statement on her Instagram feed. “What color once concealed is now displayed in plain sight — the figures, birds, and creatures in my work step forward, confronting you in all their expressiveness.”

This exhibit is a special, one-night-only “pop-up” experience, a unique model presented by AAG.

Both locations of The Pit Room are open today, July 9.

WITH POWER OUTAGES over many portions of the city, Houstonians need alternative places to cool off more than ever before. Below is an updated list of open restaurants where you can eat well and stay a while. Pack up and seek out one of these respites!

Keep Reading Show less
Food

Chris Shepherd, left, is hosting a dinner at Four Seasons next month and, on right, wine from Robert Mondavi Wines that will be served at a dinner in Napa for Southern Smoke Foundation

MANY RESTAURANTS, COFFEE shops, and bars across H-Town are still closed due to power outages from Beryl. Others, who have since opened, are struggling with staff displacements as well as wasted food, property damage and loss of consistent revenue.

Keep Reading Show less
Food