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I See the Future It's Black, explores Black identity in the future through different mediums including painting, ceramics, sculpture and photography.
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Before carving “David” or covering the Sistine Chapel’s ceiling in frescoes, Michelangelo Buonarroti painted “The Torment of Saint Anthony.”
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Cole Newman shares how he makes geometric masterpieces with a suspended paint can and canvas at his Richardson studio.
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This year, Deep Ellum became a national historic landmark — with its decades of music and live theater. Now there's an archivist working to save that history.
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The artist, Fort Worth's Sedrick Huckaby will also give a talk with Lee Sunday at the Amon Carter Museum.
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“Robert Motherwell: Pure Painting” explores a broad expanse of the artist’s career, from some of his earliest paintings created during World War II to the final painting in his “Elegy to the Spanish Republic” series, which was finished shortly before his death in 1991.
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Fisher left abstraction behind to become a pioneer in combining text and visuals in his work. He worked out of the same studio in Fort Worth for more than 40 years.
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"If You Look Hard Enough, You Can See Our Future" at the African American Museum in Fair Park features 60 artworks from Southern Africa. It's one small part of a 25,000-item art collection from the late owner of Nando's chicken chain.
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You can almost hear the coyotes howl and the wind blow at Lone Gallery's exhibition of West Texas art, featuring internationally-known artist Cruz Ortiz.
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Anne Windfohr Marion was a billionaire, a rancher, a philanthropist and an oil executive — with a zest for art.
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The Kimbell Art Museum has been called "a museum of masterpieces." So for its 50th annniversary, here's a choice of five masterworks — with a significance beyond their genius artistry.
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You've heard of the Dallas Art Fair? It's brought international galleries to North Texas for 14 years. Now, Artexpo Dallas aims for different art lovers, different pocketbooks.