Skip Navigation

Arts News You Need: Art In The Storm, An Acting Niche And More Arts News

ArtandSeek.net 17

Happy Monday! Thanks for checking out Art&Seek’s weekly look back at the biggest and most important stories in the North Texas arts scene. If you or your friends want to know more about what’s happening in the North Texas arts world, check out our weekly newsletter. Click here to sign up.

Our thoughts are with all of those enduring Hurricane Harvey and its aftermath this week. That includes many artists and arts institutions.  Here are some updates:

 

A Quick Look At Art&Seek’s Reporting

  • In 1988, Carter High School’s football team dominated the competition on the way to a state title. And then, that title was taken away. This week, “The Big Screen” team discusses Carter’s fall from grace with Adam Hootnick, director of “What Carter Lost,” the new ESPN documentary about the team.
Elisa Saldivar gets a Frida Kahlo-inspired look, courtesy of Reina Rebelde. The makeup line was helping participants in the record attempt get ready before the final tally.

Elisa Saldivar gets a Frida Kahlo-inspired look, courtesy of Reina Rebelde. The makeup line was helping participants in the record attempt get ready before the final tally.

  • The Dallas Museum of Art is still waiting to hear whether this summer’s Frida Kahlo look-alike contest officially set a Guinness World Record. There’s no disputing the crowd: More than 5,000 Frida wannabes showed up.The reaction was beyond the wildest dreams of Jose Santoyo and Ramiro Luna, two so-called “Dreamers” who thought up the idea for the event.  In our weekly State of the Arts conversation, Art&Seek’s Anne Bothwell sat down with them to learn how immigration activism led them to art.

What Else You’ve Got To Know

Rockport Center for the Arts (RCA), which is directly on the water and was directly in the path of the hurricane.

Rockport Center for the Arts (RCA), which is directly on the water and was directly in the path of the hurricane.

What We’re Reading

Bill Leissner with Willie Nelson Photo: Bill Leissner

Bill Leissner with Willie Nelson
Photo: Bill Leissner

What We’re Listening To

El Corrido de Boyle Heights, or The Ballad of Boyle Heights, was painted in 1983 by the East Los Streetscapers, an artist collective that painted a number of murals across Los Angeles' Boyle Heights neighborhood. Monika Evstatieva/NPR

El Corrido de Boyle Heights, or The Ballad of Boyle Heights, was painted in 1983 by the East Los Streetscapers, an artist collective that painted a number of murals across Los Angeles’ Boyle Heights neighborhood.
Monika Evstatieva/NPR

  • In ‘More Than A Picture’ Exhibit, History Happens Now (NPR)


What We’re Looking At

Photo Of The Week