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  1. Virtual Cinema Showcases New German Films

    May 3, 2021 - The MFAH joins Goethe Pop Up Houston and Houston Cinema Arts Society to feature two dramas via Virtual Cinema: Exile and I Was I Am I Will Be. I Was I Am I Will BeThe opening montage features photocopied passports, multiple translated languages, and a wedding that seems to be as unromantic and transactional as possible. The leads greatly impress: They are very much like the proverbial ships passing in the night, yet the time they share is special. • “I Was I Am I Will Be” / WATCH HERE May 14 to 23.

  2. Home Is an Intimate Space: Amalia Mesa-Bains & “Transparent Migrations”

    Dec 1, 2017 - I felt from the very beginning, when I learned of this exhibition, that this was a place for my work, because I had a long history of this theme. What is significant about having your work on view in Houston? I talked with Mesa-Bains about the installation. What do you hope visitors take away from Transparent Migrations? I think it’s a work that invites contemplation. I am a first-generation Chicano [a person of Mexican origin or descent], and one of the roles I occupied was that of someone who made ofrendas—so most of my early work was centered around the home altar.

  3. Following the Road to “Aferim!”

    Jun 1, 2016 - I really made an effort; I even went to the sales agent to beg for one! I was excited to see that it was programmed at the Tribeca Film Festival in New York a few months later, so I finally got to see it. I first heard of Aferim! when it had its world premiere at the Berlinale (Berlin International Film Festival) last year, but I was unable to get a ticket. I was so impressed that I went back to see it again the next night—something I’ve only done two other times in my life! Can you put Aferim! in the context of the Romanian New Wave?

  4. Meet the Chef: Marlies Wasterval

    May 26, 2016 - I personally am not a brunch eater, but I love to serve it! What’s your favorite part about working at an art museum? I think the most appealing change is having running specials. The regular menu is great, but it’s also a lot of fun for me—and the customers too, I think—to try something new every week. Also, I love the brunch. When I was growing up, my dad lived just down the street from where I work now—so when we came to his house, we spent a lot of time in museums, including the MFAH. I find a lot of comfort in this little corner of town.

  5. Get to Know the “Bhogi Yogi” & Join Us on Sundays for “MFAH on the Mat”

    Apr 15, 2020 - I normally assess myself in the morning and take it from there, so the type of yoga I practice changes depending on how my mind and body feel that day. I meet in the middle of both. Want to see more? I love visiting my friends at Empower Fitness Lab, where I cycle. How would you describe your personal yoga style? Mindful. I find myself in the middle of Yogi and Bhogi, fighting to find moderation in Bhoga and intense attention in Yoga.

  6. MFAH Films Keeps the Light Alive

    Aug 2, 2016 - I love the clacking sound of the projectors when they’re going; I take pride in keeping the machines running smoothly and making perfect reel changes. On the one hand I feel sad because I’m a dinosaur, a rare breed. I don’t much care for the digital world. There are cool aspects about it, of course: A lot of things are easier, faster, and cheaper, although I really don’t like that focus. It’s less human.

  7. The Story of Azaleas at Bayou Bend

    Aug 29, 2016 - I am pleased to report that this year I completed the search, and Miss Hogg’s azalea collection is now fully restored at Bayou Bend. Photo by Rick Gardner in memory of Mary Gardner I notice your list does not include azaleas, which I think of as a traditional Southern flower. By the time I began working at Bayou Bend in 2001, one-third of the original azalea collection was no longer represented in the gardens. Since then, I have made it my mission to find the lost flowers.

  8. My Movies Houstonians Love Inspiration: “Hedwig and the Angry Inch”

    Feb 24, 2016 - What I found onscreen, however, was a story about a scathingly witty person overcoming cruel tragedies to achieve her artistic dream. Hedwig made me laugh until I cried. To those who’ve already seen this movie, I say I can’t wait to see it on the big screen again, this time with you. On Monday, March 7, join Gwendolyn Zepeda as she introduces “Hedwig and the Angry Inch.” When I was honored with the offer to host a favorite comedy for Movies Houstonians Love, my first choice was Hedwig and the Angry Inch.

  9. In the Beginning

    Nov 3, 2011 - Executive Office of the President, “better men” than I have been working on it. I know because, try as I might, I have only scratched the surface on the research and projects conducted by the U.S. Sitting down to write my first blog entry – adding, I might note, to the sixty terabytes of data already whirling on the museum’s more than thirty virtual servers - I began to reflect on what could possibly have driven me to tackle What would stop that bitstream, I daydreamed further, from being applied to newspaper articles or library books? A “term” that breached the boundaries of nomenclatures and language.

  10. Capturing “Inverted Worlds”: A Talk with Vera Lutter

    Feb 8, 2016 - I think later on when I started photographing, I subconsciously thought of that. The monumentality, the technology, and the sort of inhumane aspect, they drive me. I haven’t seen that here, but that would probably be the area I’d go. I grew up in an industrial center near Dusseldorf, Germany, which was a center of steel and coal mining. Gallery view of Inverted Worlds I wanted to photograph Venice because I was interested in seeing when the city floods, when Venice’s reflections are suspended underneath the city itself.