Sections Arts

7831-7860 of 9,125 entries
Exhibitionism
'Malcolm Bucknall + Bale Creek Allen'
Local Arts Reviews

Rachel Koper, Feb. 6, 2004

Shadow or No Shadow, It's First Saturday
Shadow or No Shadow, It's First Saturday
February may be a month of uncertainty, but you can be sure that the first Saturday will find art galleries across Austin offering tours and special events

Robert Faires, Feb. 6, 2004

Run for Your Wife
Local Arts Reviews

Barry Pineo, Feb. 6, 2004

Weird Science Takes the Stage
Weird Science Takes the Stage
The strange, true tale of how a high school science textbook was turned into a play

C. Denby Swanson, Feb. 6, 2004

Where in the World Is Einojuhani Rautavaara?
Where in the World Is Einojuhani Rautavaara?
The singular, compelling choral music of the Baltic Sea countries has grown in popularity, so Conspirare is exploring the region's sounds in Cool Blue, its first concert of 2004

Robert Faires, Feb. 6, 2004

Articulations
Georgetown High's annual musical needs your help, Ballet Austin's foundation passes the cool million mark, and there's new art at the convention center

Robert Faires, Feb. 6, 2004

Don't Drown
Local Arts Reviews

Robert Faires, Feb. 6, 2004

Behind America's Funnyman
Behind America's Funnyman
For rare comic Neil Hamburger, it's all about the laughs -- and keeping the bug spray handy

Steve Birmingham, Jan. 30, 2004

Are We on the Edge?
The Bateman Trilogy
In The Bateman Trilogy, about a family of working-class suburbanite Texans, Ken Webster reveals a fine playwright's voice to go along with his strong directorial style

Robi Polgar, Jan. 30, 2004

Black Things
Spank Dance Company's Black Things, in which black-clad dancers dance in near darkness, is original, striking, and resonant of the shadow side of our interior and exterior worlds

Wayne Alan Brenner, Jan. 30, 2004

Articulations
Choreographer Allison Orr pops up on the National Geographic Channel, and Ballet East and UT professor Bion Tsang are honored

Robert Faires, Jan. 30, 2004

Are We on the Edge?
Getting the answers to timely and timeless questions at the 2004 FronteraFest Long Fringe

Robert Faires, Jan. 30, 2004

Mozart Birthday Celebration
Local Arts Reviews

Jerry Young, Jan. 30, 2004

How to Belly-Dance for Your Husband Starring Little Egypt
Tongue and Groove Theatre's silly How to Belly-Dance for Your Husband Starring Little Egypt starts off delightfully enough but winds up as a handful of sesame-flavored cotton candy

Wayne Alan Brenner, Jan. 30, 2004

Dance Carousel 2004
In the choreographic sampler Dance Carousel 2004, 10 local dance makers show how much dance they can create in a mere 60 seconds apiece

Robert Faires, Jan. 30, 2004

Are We on the Edge?
1 Performer, 2 Shows, 19 Characters!
Two solo shows of Gemma Wilcox show the artist's imaginative approach to theatricality, a rich sensitivity to character, and a winning sense of humor

Robert Faires, Jan. 30, 2004

Will Power: The Course of Love
The Austin Shakespeare Festival's Will Power: The Course of Love, a compendium of Shakespearean scenes, songs, and sonnets, is as short and sweet as a chocolate heart

Barry Pineo, Jan. 30, 2004

Exhibitionism
Pythia Dust
Local Arts Reviews

Robert Faires, Jan. 30, 2004

Topdog/Underdog
Local Arts Reviews

Heather Barfield Cole, Jan. 23, 2004

Survey Says: Arts Rule!
Survey Says: Arts Rule!
Three out of four Austinites agree that the arts are where it's at

Robert Faires, Jan. 23, 2004

Articulations
Playwright Dan Dietz gets his second play staged at the Humana Festival in Louisville, Johnson / Long Dance Company heads to Hamburg, and Zach shuffles its season

Robert Faires, Jan. 23, 2004

The Winter's Tale
Local Arts Reviews

Barry Pineo, Jan. 23, 2004

Exhibitionism
The Road to Wigan Pier
Local Arts Reviews

Molly Beth Brenner, Jan. 23, 2004

The Earth Moves
The Earth Moves
Getting into the orbit of Ellen Bartel and Spank Dance Company

Wayne Alan Brenner, Jan. 23, 2004

Exhibitionism
Così Fan Tutte
Local Arts Reviews

Heather Barfield Cole, Jan. 16, 2004

Titus Andronicus
Local Arts Reviews

Barry Pineo, Jan. 16, 2004

'Food Wine, and Thou'
'Food Wine, and Thou'
In its savory new exhibition 'Food, Wine and Thou,' Studio2Gallery offers a feast of artwork whose succulent colors and scrumptious shapes aim to fill that empty space in your hungry heart

Robert Faires, Jan. 16, 2004

Articulations
Austin won't be a capital of culture in 2004, Martha Norkunas won't be the director of Texas Folklife Resources, and Lana Dieterich won't be opening 'Always … Patsy Cline' this week

Robert Faires, Jan. 16, 2004

One Flea Spare
Local Arts Reviews

Molly Beth Brenner, Jan. 16, 2004

The Human Touch
The Human Touch
Laurie Young Stevens finds the passion and flash in baroque music

Robert Faires, Jan. 16, 2004

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