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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.
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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.
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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?
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.
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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.