-
More than 2000 unclaimed photos and negatives were found that covered the '40s through the early '60s. They provide a personal, ground-level view of Texas life - pre-disco, pre-cellphones, pre-cable TV.
-
When dogs and cats (and the occasional hedgehog, guinea pig or iguana) leave the Linda McNatt Animal Care & Adoption Center with their forever family, they’ll pass under a very special new work of art.
-
Printmaker Jose Guadalupe Posada's work is one of two shows at the Arlington Museum of Art. They are the last before the museum moves to a new location next year.
-
More than 1,000 artists will soon set up shop across 21 blocks of Magnolia Avenue in Fort Worth’s Near Southside.
-
From Cry Havoc Theater Company to Asel Art Supply, here are the spaces that impacted North Texas’ arts and culture scene.
-
A drop in volunteers, burnout and pandemic challenges have led the nonprofit to shutter.
-
Gladys Roldán-de-Moras was a young girl in Monterrey, Mexico, when she began to paint. But she was not allowed to study art.
-
Busy dad and artist Pindar Van Arman was looking for a way to take care of his kids and still have time to make art when, in the process, he developed software that would eventually help patients at Cook Children’s Medical Center create their own works.
-
Tufting, quilting, crocheting, macrame and more are getting a branding glow-up by younger generations on TikTok and Instagram.
-
The designer based in Richardson says the painting makes her feel “optimistic.”
-
Brooke Chaney has become an influential teaching artist in Dallas. For her latest project, she’s mentoring a group of high-school students as they contribute a mural to the city.
-
Local muralist and painter Hatziel Flores says the group’s focus on fair pay is vital for working artists.