Kathrine G. McGovern College of the Arts Box Office
Contact Info
Call Us:
713-743-3388
Open remotely by phone or email, Monday through Friday, 9:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. or on-site one hour prior to event start times.
American
artist
and
writer
Christopher
Myers
mines
the
fruitful,
yet
enigmatic
space
between
archive,
myth,
and
emanation
as
he
translates
obscured
histories
from
around
the
world
into
vivid
contemporary
forms.
Across
disaporas
and
diaries,
It
has
been
said
that
Myers
works
with
materials
that
hold
histories
within
them,
of
movement,
migration,
and
exchange.
His
diverse,
rigorously
researched
practice
spans
textiles,
actions,
shadow
puppets,
film,
and
sculptural
objects,
which
are
often
produced
in
collaboration
with
artisans
from
around
the
globe.
This
exhibition
will
look
back
at
the
past
five
years
of
Myers’
inter-disciplinary
work
–
bringing
together
epic
appliqué
tapestries
with
stained
glass
lightboxes
and
a
new
installation
that
highlights
Myers’
ongoing
work
in
performance.
The
artist
will
also
visit
UH
to
elaborate
upon
his
recent
television
and
theatre
work,
gathering
a
multitude
of
voices
and
techniques
to
colorfully
navigate
the
porous
terrain
between
records
and
those
who
live
them.
This
exhibition
is
partially
supported
by
the
Cynthia
Woods
Mitchell
Center
for
the
Arts.
The
Blaffer
Art
Museum
is
honored
to
present
the
first
solo
museum
exhibition
of
work
by
artist
John
Guzman
(b.
1984).
Flesh
and
Bone
focuses
on
works
produced
in
the
artist’s
hometown
of
San
Antonio
and
the
Texas
debut
of
paintings
completed
during,
and
immediately
following,
time
at
the
NXTHVN
Studio
Fellowship
Program
in
New
Haven,
Connecticut.
As
a
spectator
to
claustrophobic
psychological
and
physical
states
growing
up
in
San
Antonio’s
Southside,
Guzman’s
monumental
paintings
are
a
byproduct
of
experiences,
recordings,
and
environmental
reflections.
The
artist
abstracts
the
human
figure
to
reflect
the
harm
endured
by
the
body,
and
the
unrecognizable
transformation
brought
on
by
years
of
punishment,
addiction,
relapse,
and
self-destruction.