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Visual Arts for Sat., Sept. 24
Events
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    (Probably) The World's Biggest Small Street Salon

    Austin's Really Small Museums host their first-ever street salon, featuring 18 artists in two very, very small street museums right alongside the asphalt: the Banton Road Museum of Art (3509 Banton) and the 14th Corner Contemporary (1311 Harvey).
    Sat., Sept. 24, 6-7:30pm (Banton), 7:30-9pm (14th Corner). Free.  
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    Collection Rert: Super Saturday Surprise

    Take a trip to this eruption of fun junk and art, this convenient gift shop buffet for everyone in the universe – where you can create your own prices.
    Sat., Sept. 24, 9am-5pm
    2608-B Rogers
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    Landmarks: Self-Guided Walking Tour

    Use your smartphone to access self-guided tours of the outdoor public art sited by UT's award-winning Landmarks program any time you feel like it. BONUS: There's also a free, docent-led tour starting at Marc Quinn's "Spiral of the Galaxy" (1501 Red River) on Sun., Jan. 8, 11am.
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    Liminal Space: An Evening of Art and Music

    Here's the reveal for a series of eight paintings by Erica Prasad that depict memories of growing together, falling in love, moving apart, and healing. Bonus: Live music by the Hindustani classical singer/composer Plume Girl.
    Sat., Sept. 24, 6-10pm. Free.  
    All the Sudden, 906 Koerner
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    The CATS+: Are UXperienced

    The experiment is to push back on technology. The experience is the Collaborative Art + Technology Situation (CATS+), a new program at the Museum of Human Achievement that pairs artists and tech wizards to collaborate on projects and share their processes. CATS+ 1.0 is composed of three pairs of artists who spent the summer glitching consensus reality by creating their own user experiences. Now you, citizen, you come see them.
    Sat., Oct. 1, 1-4pm. Free.  
OPENING
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    Flatbed Press: Everyone

    Here's an exhibition of prints created by Connie Arismendi during her residency at Flatbed during 2021-2022, centered on words that carry multiple meanings. This showcase includes 18 large monoprints and a suite of three etchings (featuring monoprint patterns printed as chine collé with the etched image/word).
    Through Oct. 16
CLOSING
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    Artworks Gallery: Conjunctions

    This is an exhibition of Les Satinover's "unapologetic" and monumental paintings that portray male figures in vast landscapes. While it may seem confrontationally nude, the artist assures us that the purpose here is to "produce an emotive sensual evocation of skin, muscle, and form with a subconscious connection to beauty as truth."
    Through Sept. 24
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    Big Medium: Yo Trabajo Con La Tierra/I Work With The Earth

    This multimedia, multivalent, multifantastic exhibition features five women artists – Melissa Aguirre, Alexa Capareda, Paloma Mayorga, Virginia Lee Montgomery (VLM), and Alejandra Regalado – who explore movement and place in relation to landscape, geological bodies, and other nonhuman intelligences. Using their own bodies as medium, the artists share ecofeminist sensibilities through video, installation, sculpture, photography, and performance works.
    Through Sept. 24  
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    Camiba Gallery: Entangled

    Collected and respected for her experimental approach to painting, Charlotte Smith is well established as royalty in Texas contemporary abstract art; this is an exhibition of her most recent paintings.
    Through Sept. 24
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    MASS Gallery: Jonathan's

    Listen: "Since the closing of Spegetto Warehouse, Jonathan’s has taken the lead to become the Men’s Warehouse of restaurants. For one night only, you’ll have a chance to see and taste it for yourself." Cooked up by Elissa Ussery and Nicole Levasseur – the creators of Chuggy’s Christmas, Monchichi in Space, Hellchug, Tassy’s bedroom bar, and Poachers Bar – chef prepped by FFTwin Beth Schindler – it's a sensational attempt to bring you the terrible but familiar hometown Italian restaurant experience.
    Through Sept. 24. Saturdays, 6-11pm
ONGOING
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    ACC Art Galleries: Quotations from Daily Life

    This exhibition brings together the work of seven ACC Studio Art faculty members – Jill Bedgood, Jonas Criscoe, Melanie Hickerson, Brian Johnson, Haydeé Victoria Suescum, David Thornberry, and Gary Webernick – who work in a range of media including painting, drawing, printmaking, assemblage art, and sculpture.
    Through Oct. 27  
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    ACC Art Galleries: Sam Coronado's Serie Project

    This new exhibition, "Cultivating Community through Art: Sam Coronado’s Serie Project and Its Continuing Legacy," provides a fine, curated look at exactly what the title says, touching on Coronado Print Studio today, while also demonstrating the new opportunities that can be cultivated through persistence and dedication to the arts.
    Through Dec. 8
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    Art for the People Gallery: Spectacular

    New art, new artists, new show – a group exhibition (more than 30 local artists) supercharges the interior of this popular South First Street venue. Bonus: This is also the debut of curator Hallie Rae Ward's own "Classical POP" show.
    Through Oct. 21
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    Assemblage Contemporary Craftsman Gallery: A Sense of Place

    Our own sense of place informs us that this venue's out in Buda, actually. But damned if a trip to the ACCG isn't always worthwhile – especially with the bold landscapes and botanicals of painter Debbie Carroll being celebrated there.
    Through Sept. 30
    306 S. Main #106, Buda
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    Blue Moon Glassworks

    Handmade glass art and jewelry.
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    Butridge Gallery

    The Bliss of Solitude Saul Jerome E. San Juan presents his plein-air paintings, featuring new watercolors painted in Wimberley and the Big Bend region of West Texas in July 2022. Fragments of the Landscape Tiffany Heng Hui Lee utilizes shape, color, and texture to create mixed-media collages, paintings, and sculptures to capture segments of the natural landscape. Nature in Vogue Neena Buxani’s vibrant paintings of flora and fauna highlight the glamour of the natural world.
    Through Oct. 15
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    Cloud Tree: Pinnacles

    This new series of paintings by John Mulvany weaves together events – remembered, recounted, or directly experienced – into an allegorical narrative documenting a singular imagined event set over a 24-hour period in the desert and mountains along the border of Texas and Mexico. "When I took my first trip to Big Bend," says the artist, "the heat, the extraordinary light, the intense silence, the long blue shadows – it was the most exotic and intense landscape I had ever experienced." And now you can know that experience, too, citizen – via visions from the eyes and mind of this talented man, as rendered in meticulous pigments on paper, on canvas, on the heart of the world.
    Closing reception with the artist: Sun., Oct. 9, 2pm
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    Co-Lab Projects: How Soon Is Now?

    This multimedia installation by Adrian Aguilera consists of found videos exploring a single year, 1997, projected on a cone-shaped screen, along with an assemblage of playlists, light-based work, human-scale text, and print works. "Together, these pieces might function as non-explicit information retrieval systems."
    Through Oct. 29
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    Davis Gallery: Beyond the Western Sky

    The newest group show at this excellent venue features works by B. Shawn Cox, Faustinus Deraet, Garrett Middaugh, Dana Younger, Julie Davis, and Felice House.
    Through Oct. 15
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    Elisabet Ney Museum: Eve

    This is a new exhibition by documentarian photographer Cindy Elizabeth, featuring an outdoor installation that is immersed within the museum’s native landscape. There are large-scale photographs inside the building, too, interwoven amongst Elisabet Ney's own neoclassical sculptures.
    Through Oct. 30. Free.
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    Goodluckhavefun Gallery: Superposition

    Quantum forces have conspired to entangle Austin’s Goodluckhavefun Gallery with San Antonio-based collective Motherling. The resulting phenomenon brings artists with a focus on geometric abstraction into spatial proximity, reflected up and down the I-35 corridor from their primary locale. Works from seven San Antonio artists will occupy the Austin venue for the run of the show, while works from artists from the Geometric Abstraction Group of Austin will reside in San Antonio.
    Through Oct. 29
    1207-B Enfield
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    GrayDUCK Gallery: Delivered and Discarded

    Yoonmi Nam, an artist born in Seoul, South Korea, works in traditional printmaking processes such as mokuhanga (Japanese-style water-based woodblock printing) and lithography to make imagery and explores other materials – clay, glass, and paper – to make three-dimensional still lifes. Well, to be precise, to make gorgeous three-dimensional still lifes.
    Through Oct. 16  
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    Hyde Park Grill: Ernie Gammage

    The Austin-based author and musician displays his artwork on the walls of this popular eatery.
    Through Oct. 10
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    ICOSA's Window Dressing: Canopy

    Jamal Hussain's new media installation investigates the shapes and patterns of three majestic trees in Austin that hold unique significance: Sorin Oak, Homeless Memorial Tree, and the Dada Lab Home Tree.
    Opening Reception: Fri., Sept. 23, 7-9pm
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    Ivester Contemporary: Pulp Alchemy

    This is a solo exhibition by Jenn Hassin – the artist’s first show of new work since completing her MFA at Columbia University. The work in "Pulp Alchemy" features military uniforms from all six branches of service, medical uniforms, children’s clothing, blue jeans, carved bone, and porcelain, meticulously transformed into beautiful, raw memorials to the survivors of trauma.
    Through Oct. 15
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    Laguna Gloria

    This local treasure of a venue, run by those Contemporary Austin folks who also bring us the Jones Center shows Downtown, is all about the outdoors – which is perfect for these trickily navigated times of ours, n'est-ce pas? Recommended: Stop by and breathe in the air, enjoy the lawns and gardens and the many examples of world-class sculpture arrayed across the property, and (as Frankie used to say) r-e-l-a-x.
    Thu.-Fri., 9am-noon; Sat.-Sun., 9am-3pm
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    Link & Pin Gallery: Beyond

    This exhibition comprises new works by Rama Tiru and features digital, mostly surreal paintings, both full color and monochrome, with augmented reality elements added to some of the images.
    Through Oct. 1
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    Lora Reynolds Gallery: Lost Pines

    This exhibition of new photographs is the gallery's first presentation of work by the Austin artist (and musician and husband and father and professor) Barry Stone. You want to see images that are beautiful and often a little eerie? You want to witness photos with backstories that can inspire something like awe? Find yourself among these "Lost Pines."
    Through Dec. 3
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    Lydia Street Gallery: SUM of the Parts

    Valerie Fowler, that acclaimed painter of natural phantasmagoria, returns with a new show. Says the artist: "I began this body of work feeling scattered, a little spent and rudderless, then walloped by unrelenting heat, the worst in my memory, and I’m a lifelong Texan… Beyond the walls of my studio, fires and floods were happening seemingly everywhere, and the Arctic ice cap was melting four times faster than scientists had previously understood. I felt exhausted from the challenge to maintain hope. I decided to just keep at the work, following curiosity, making pieces that reflected my scattered consciousness." Suggestion: Give your eyes a glimpse of the wild sublime and soak in the glory of what Fowler's brushes and pigments so vividly capture.
    Through Oct. 30. Free.
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    Martha's Contemporary: Hokey Pokey + What You See Is What You Get

    Here's a two-person exhibition that features painting, installation, videography, and sculpture by Moll Brau and Wes Thompson. It's a deep dive into a pool of loneliness, triumph, and rebirth. It's a forest of mazes where fireflies provide the light. It's a show of creations from a pair of terrific, hardworking local artists and you don't want to miss it.
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    Martha's Contemporary: True Romance

    The paintings here are a reflection of Brach Tiller's lived experience in Detroit over the past year, an expression of his romantic relationship and the city of Detroit. Bonus: Crystal Topcoat by Payton McGowen and Adam Linn.
    Through Oct. 15
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    Modern Rocks Gallery: Fifty Years in Exile

    This new exhibition reveals a collection of rare, previously unseen, and vintage photographs from The Rolling Stones’ 1972 session with legendary photographer Norman Seeff. Photos from the late-night shoot were ultimately used to produce the set of postcards included with the original pressing of the band’s masterpiece, Exile on Main St.
    Through Sept. 30. Free.
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    Neill-Cochran House: The Hope Suite

    Mark Smith’s The Hope Suite is a series of forty-four collages inspired by the theme of global unity. Each 24-by-18-inch work on paper consists of a background monoprint or a digital photoprint, overlaid with collage, calligraphy, and mixed media. Note: The originals are part of the permanent collection of the Obama Presidential Center Museum in Chicago; the works on display here are limited-edition prints of those originals.
    Through Dec. 16. Free.  
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    Northern-Southern Gallery: Outer Middle

    Brad Tucker has made some amazing new works: cheerfully complex, savvy, funny, reflective, and beautiful. Transmountain's design work is Italo-modern by way of El Paso, embedding critical reflections into luxurious forms, using material as grammar. Together, this pairing soars.
    Closing reception: Sun., Oct. 23, 3-4pm
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    Prizer Arts & Letters: Wilhelmina Weber Furlong

    Witness now the works of Wilhelmina Weber Furlong (1878-1962), a German-American artist and teacher, the forerunner of modern impressionistic and expressionistic still life painting.
    Closing reception: Sat., Oct. 1, 6-9pm
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    The Contemporary Austin: In a Dream You Saw a Way to Survive and You Were Full of Joy

    Explore the works of eight female artists – Danielle Brathwaite-Shirley, Adriana Corral, Ellie Ga, Juliana Huxtable, Tala Madani, Danielle Mckinney, Wendy Red Star, and Clare Rojas – in this new exhibition that explores how narrative and storytelling shape our senses of self, community, history, and identity.
    Through Feb. 12
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    The Museum of Natural & Artificial Ephemerata

    This place, ah, it's one of our favorite places in the entire city; and of course they're properly corona-closed. But check 'em out online right now – it's a rich, wonder-filled website – to whet your appetite for when things get back to … uh … are we still calling it "normal," these days?
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    Wally Workman Gallery: Monochromes

    Carol Dawson draws inspiration from the natural world, exploring the life cycles of flowers from their buds, infancies, blooms, and deaths, allowing herself to use at most three pigments in her works.
    Through Oct. 30
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    Western Gallery Pop-Up: Legends of the SMS

    Witness, pardner, 13 new works by West Texas artist Lucile Wedeking – and a selection from the Western Gallery Impermanent Collection, which represents 20 artists from across the American West.
    Opening reception: Fri., Sept. 23, 6-8pm
    2307 Thornton #112
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    Women & Their Work: The Future Is Behind Us

    Rachel Wolfson Smith focuses our attention on the essential and grounding effect of beauty in nature, portraying constructed, intricate, and imagined landscapes, creating "an antidote to the imbalance many of us experience as we lurch from impulse to impulse in our tech-laden, consumer-driven, modern existence." Yes – an antidote to that, and a paean to the possibilities of graphite wielded by a brilliant hand and mind.
    Through Sept. 29
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    Wyld Gallery

    This is Ray Donley's gallery of art by Native Americans, located in that company of artistic glory called Canopy and resplendent with creations from the original people of our struggling country.
    Call for appointment
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