• Home
  • popular
  • Events
  • Submit New Event
  • Subscribe
  • About
  • News
  • Restaurants + Bars
  • City Life
  • Entertainment
  • Travel
  • Real Estate
  • Arts
  • Society
  • Home + Design
  • Fashion + Beauty
  • Innovation
  • Sports
  • Charity Guide
  • children
  • education
  • health
  • veterans
  • SOCIAL SERVICES
  • ARTS + CULTURE
  • animals
  • lgbtq
  • New Charity
  • Series
  • Delivery Limited
  • DTX Giveaway 2012
  • DTX Ski Magic
  • dtx woodford reserve manhattans
  • Your Home in the Sky
  • DTX Best of 2013
  • DTX Trailblazers
  • Tastemakers Dallas 2017
  • Healthy Perspectives
  • Neighborhood Eats 2015
  • The Art of Making Whiskey
  • DTX International Film Festival
  • DTX Tatum Brown
  • Tastemaker Awards 2016 Dallas
  • DTX McCurley 2014
  • DTX Cars in Lifestyle
  • DTX Beyond presents Party Perfect
  • DTX Texas Health Resources
  • DART 2018
  • Alexan Central
  • State Fair 2018
  • Formula 1 Giveaway
  • Zatar
  • CityLine
  • Vision Veritas
  • Okay to Say
  • Hearts on the Trinity
  • DFW Auto Show 2015
  • Northpark 50
  • Anteks Curated
  • Red Bull Cliff Diving
  • Maggie Louise Confections Dallas
  • Gaia
  • Red Bull Global Rally Cross
  • NorthPark Holiday 2015
  • Ethan's View Dallas
  • DTX City Centre 2013
  • Galleria Dallas
  • Briggs Freeman Sotheby's International Realty Luxury Homes in Dallas Texas
  • DTX Island Time
  • Simpson Property Group SkyHouse
  • DIFFA
  • Lotus Shop
  • Holiday Pop Up Shop Dallas
  • Clothes Circuit
  • DTX Tastemakers 2014
  • Elite Dental
  • Elan City Lights
  • Dallas Charity Guide
  • DTX Music Scene 2013
  • One Arts Party at the Plaza
  • J.R. Ewing
  • AMLI Design District Vibrant Living
  • Crest at Oak Park
  • Braun Enterprises Dallas
  • NorthPark 2016
  • Victory Park
  • DTX Common Desk
  • DTX Osborne Advisors
  • DTX Comforts of Home 2012
  • DFW Showcase Tour of Homes
  • DTX Neighborhood Eats
  • DTX Comforts of Home 2013
  • DTX Auto Awards
  • Cottonwood Art Festival 2017
  • Nasher Store
  • Guardian of The Glenlivet
  • Zyn22
  • Dallas Rx
  • Yellow Rose Gala
  • Opendoor
  • DTX Sun and Ski
  • Crow Collection
  • DTX Tastes of the Season
  • Skye of Turtle Creek Dallas
  • Cottonwood Art Festival
  • DTX Charity Challenge
  • DTX Culture Motive
  • DTX Good Eats 2012
  • DTX_15Winks
  • St. Bernard Sports
  • Jose
  • DTX SMU 2014
  • DTX Up to Speed
  • st bernard
  • Ardan West Village
  • DTX New York Fashion Week spring 2016
  • Taste the Difference
  • Parktoberfest 2016
  • Bob's Steak and Chop House
  • DTX Smart Luxury
  • DTX Earth Day
  • DTX_Gaylord_Promoted_Series
  • IIDA Lavish
  • Huffhines Art Trails 2017
  • Red Bull Flying Bach Dallas
  • Y+A Real Estate
  • Beauty Basics
  • DTX Pet of the Week
  • Long Cove
  • Charity Challenge 2014
  • Legacy West
  • Wildflower
  • Stillwater Capital
  • Tulum
  • DTX Texas Traveler
  • Dallas DART
  • Soldiers' Angels
  • Alexan Riveredge
  • Ebby Halliday Realtors
  • Zephyr Gin
  • Sixty Five Hundred Scene
  • Christy Berry
  • Entertainment Destination
  • Dallas Art Fair 2015
  • St. Bernard Sports Duck Head
  • Jameson DTX
  • Alara Uptown Dallas
  • Cottonwood Art Festival fall 2017
  • DTX Tastemakers 2015
  • Cottonwood Arts Festival
  • The Taylor
  • Decks in the Park
  • Alexan Henderson
  • Gallery at Turtle Creek
  • Omni Hotel DTX
  • Red on the Runway
  • Whole Foods Dallas 2018
  • Artizone Essential Eats
  • Galleria Dallas Runway Revue
  • State Fair 2016 Promoted
  • Trigger's Toys Ultimate Cocktail Experience
  • Dean's Texas Cuisine
  • Real Weddings Dallas
  • Real Housewives of Dallas
  • Jan Barboglio
  • Wildflower Arts and Music Festival
  • Hearts for Hounds
  • Okay to Say Dallas
  • Indochino Dallas
  • Old Forester Dallas
  • Dallas Apartment Locators
  • Dallas Summer Musicals
  • PSW Real Estate Dallas
  • Paintzen
  • DTX Dave Perry-Miller
  • DTX Reliant
  • Get in the Spirit
  • Bachendorf's
  • Holiday Wonder
  • Village on the Parkway
  • City Lifestyle
  • opportunity knox villa-o restaurant
  • Nasher Summer Sale
  • Simpson Property Group
  • Holiday Gift Guide 2017 Dallas
  • Carlisle & Vine
  • DTX New Beginnings
  • Get in the Game
  • Red Bull Air Race
  • Dallas DanceFest
  • 2015 Dallas Stylemaker
  • Youth With Faces
  • Energy Ogre
  • DTX Renewable You
  • Galleria Dallas Decadence
  • Bella MD
  • Tractorbeam
  • Young Texans Against Cancer
  • Fresh Start Dallas
  • Dallas Farmers Market
  • Soldier's Angels Dallas
  • Shipt
  • Elite Dental
  • Texas Restaurant Association 2017
  • State Fair 2017
  • Scottish Rite
  • Brooklyn Brewery
  • DTX_Stylemakers
  • Alexan Crossings
  • Ascent Victory Park
  • Top Texans Under 30 Dallas
  • Discover Downtown Dallas
  • San Luis Resort Dallas
  • Greystar The Collection
  • FIG Finale
  • Greystar M Line Tower
  • Lincoln Motor Company
  • The Shelby
  • Jonathan Goldwater Events
  • Windrose Tower
  • Gift Guide 2016
  • State Fair of Texas 2016
  • Choctaw Dallas
  • TodayTix Dallas promoted
  • Whole Foods
  • Unbranded 2014
  • Frisco Square
  • Unbranded 2016
  • Circuit of the Americas 2018
  • The Katy
  • Snap Kitchen
  • Partners Card
  • Omni Hotels Dallas
  • Landmark on Lovers
  • Harwood Herd
  • Galveston.com Dallas
  • Holiday Happenings Dallas 2018
  • TenantBase
  • Cottonwood Art Festival 2018
  • Hawkins-Welwood Homes
  • The Inner Circle Dallas
  • Eating in Season Dallas
  • ATTPAC Behind the Curtain
  • TodayTix Dallas
  • The Alexan
  • Toyota Music Factory
  • Nosh Box Eatery
  • Wildflower 2018
  • Society Style Dallas 2018
  • Texas Scottish Rite Hospital 2018
  • 5 Mockingbird
  • 4110 Fairmount
  • Visit Taos
  • Allegro Addison
  • Dallas Tastemakers 2018
  • The Village apartments
  • City of Burleson Dallas

    Your Show of Shows

    Dallas art galleries bloom this month with intriguing mix of works

    Kendall Morgan
    kendall Morgan
    Apr 1, 2016 | 9:01 am

    Birds, bunnies, and blooms of all sorts make for some very seasonally appropriate Dallas art gallery shows this month. Add in an alternate universe created by a singular talent, and you’ve got one of the more intriguing mixes of work (and mediums) we’ve seen in quite some time.

    Here is what’s naturally wonderful in April:

    “Spelboken,” Natasha Bowdoin, at Talley Dunn Gallery
    Reception: April 1, 6-8 pm
    ​Exhibition dates: April 1-May 14

    Timing is everything, and the cut paper and painted board works by Natasha Bowdoin seem particularly perfect to show in spring. The Houston-based artist is taking over Talley Dunn with larger-than-life blooms drawn from a rich history of scientific illustration. Moth drawings and works of paper bark and roots have a fecundity that brings to mind the inevitable stages of growth and decay found in the natural world.

    Formerly installed at the Savannah College of Art and Design, her work Garden Plot is the piece de resistance, measuring 10 feet high and 30 feet in length.

    Says Dunn, “We are excited to have [it] installed at the gallery, especially since she has added more than 20 feet to the piece to make it even more immersive and incredible. It's one of the best pieces that have been created for the main gallery space.”

    Those interested in the artist’s process can attend an insightful chat on opening night at 6 pm.

    “Reflected Yeses,” Juan Fontanive, at Conduit Gallery
    Reception: April 2, 6-8 pm
    Exhibition dates: April 2- May 7

    Visitors to Conduit Gallery’s booth at last year’s Dallas Art Fair couldn’t help but be drawn to a charming kinetic sculpture of a hummingbird floating around flowers. Crafted of screen-printed cotton rag cards, gears, and sprockets by Juan Fontanive for his “Ornithology” series, the piece had a soothing quality, as much for the way it recalled a childhood flip book as for the fluttering noise it made, reminiscent of the sound of wings in motion.

    Fontanive is exhibiting four new pieces featuring birds and insects in his latest show, which gallerist Nancy Whitenack says viewers will find equally engaging.

    “It’s like the moth to the flame,” she explains. “The fact that it moves is the first thing, but if you had it turned off and just one section was showing, they’re beautiful little objects.

    “The boxes are exquisitely made, but the fact that they whirl and keep moving and the bird changes or flies around a flower is just absolutely captivating. I find myself standing and staring at it.”

    In addition, Fontanive will unveil equally kinetic larger sculptures made of colorful moving lines and squiggles. Says Whitenack, “He must really be an engineer at heart, because he’s engineered these amazing pieces. They all move and change.”

    “Soliloquy: Trenton Doyle Hancock,” at the Public Trust
    Reception:
    April 2, 6-9 pm
    Exhibition dates: April 2-May 7

    Drawn from toys, comics, pop art, American film, and classic prints, the work of Trenton Doyle Hancock is a mash-up of motifs that recalls nothing so much as the work of Henry Darger, even though their aesthetics are far from aligned.

    What Hancock has in common with that outsider artist is the ability to create his own world, a glimpse of which viewers can see at the Public Trust.

    “He’s created this alternate universe that’s built around this narrative of Mounds,” says owner Brian Gibb. “It’s amazing, the fact that he’s taken that character and made it so iconic in his imagery. I’m a huge fan of narrative work, but he’s taken the concept and run with it his whole career.”

    Furry little creatures with wincing grins, the Mounds are Hancock’s tragic protagonists. Gibb has a sculpture of a Mound on hand, and the lucky buyer will also receive a painting, only to be created by Hancock post-purchase.

    The appearance of this half-human, half-plant collectible is just an extra incentive to view Hancock’s 5-by-7 painting, the latest in the “Soliloquy” tradition of showing a single heroic piece by a notable artist.

    “Misbehaving,” Erin Stafford, at Kirk Hopper Art
    Reception: April 16, 6:30 -8:30 pm
    ​Exhibition dates: April 16- May 21

    For anyone who has ever pored over ’50s-era cookbooks with equal measures of fascination and repulsion, the alluring gelatin molds and creative appetizers crafted of soap by local artist Erin Stafford will instantly hit a nostalgic chord. Formerly shown in Austin, her “Haute Cuisine from Bygone Eras” series looks just like the real thing.

    Stafford used food molds to make the work, which she says was inspired by novelty soap makers on Etsy who craft fake pastries and treats.

    “I wanted to explore the idea of food as objects, sculpture, and entertainment while engaging with the social and historical associations,” she explains. “I have always been interested in food as metaphor, but I am also now taking on these domesticated roles in my practice with an interest in subversion.”

    Smaller tidbits titled “Amuse-Bouche” will be shown alongside the larger pieces, which are definitely the main course in an exhibit that includes additional sculptural work and installation. Look, but don’t nibble!

    Erin Stafford, Haute Cuisine from Bygone Eras (Berry). Soap and dye.

    Erin Stafford
    Photo courtesy of Kirk Hopper Fine Art
    Erin Stafford, Haute Cuisine from Bygone Eras (Berry). Soap and dye.
    openingsgalleriesevent-planner
    news/arts

    most read posts

    New H-E-B grocery store in Forney reveals official opening date

    Sophisticated new cocktail bar heads to familiar East Dallas space

    J. Alexander’s to debut in Plano with famed steaks and carrot cake

    Season Announcement

    Echo Theatre introduces Dallas audiences to a season of strangers in 2026

    Lindsey Wilson
    Jan 16, 2026 | 11:51 am
    The Roommate on Broadway
    Photo by Julieta Cervantes
    'The Roommate' was recently on Broadway.

    It's a "Season of Strangers" for Echo Theatre this year, as the Southwest's premier company for promoting dramatic works by women+ focuses on how someone different than you can change your life.

    The 28th season begins with the new musical Silhouettes by Jordan Ealey and Ari Afsar. This score-in-hand workshop was developed in the aftermath of the fall of Roe v. Wade, and examines a pivotal moment in American history through the intersecting lives of two women navigating the decision to have an abortion. Echo's managing and artistic director Kateri Cale directs, with Vonda K. Bowling as musical director.

    In a joint statement, Ealey and Afsar say that Silhouettes was born from their need to process the emotional and political aftermath of Roe’s fall. “We continue to see that history is cyclical and equity is fleeting,” they say. “But when policy fails, art has the opportunity to step in. Silhouettes is a musical about choice, sisterhood, and intergenerational courage.”

    They add that presenting the work in Dallas reflects their commitment to community-building in states like Texas, where bans and restrictions have made women and gender minorities particularly vulnerable. “We want this musical to be a safe and brave haven amid attempts to create a culture of fear and a reminder that people are not alone.”

    It runs January 16-17, 2026, and admission is free, though a $20 donation is suggested.

    The world premiere of You Must Wear A Hat by C. Meaker is next, and plugged-in Dallas theater fans might recognize the play from its reading at Kitchen Dog Theater in 2019.

    Tuesday and Weeks make hats on the Great Barrier Reef, waiting for the world to end. It's described as "A play for two. And a rabbit."

    C. “Meaks” Meaker (they/them) is a playwright, essayist, and teacher whose work often explores queerness, monstrosity, and the end of the world. Their plays have been performed and developed across the United States, including the Kennedy Center, Seattle Repertory Theatre, San Francisco Playhouse, Annex Theatre (Seattle), Hub Theater (D.C.), Fat Theater Project (Chicago), and About Face (Chicago). They’re a two-year finalist for the Dramatist Guild National Fellows program and a recent finalist for the Jerome Hill Theater Arts Fellow.

    You Must Wear a Hat runs February 27-March 14, 2026.

    The season closes with The Roommate by Jen Silverman. The play was on Broadway in 2024 starring marquee names Mia Farrow and Patti LuPone.

    In it, a divorced Midwesterner takes a roommate from The Bronx. A relationship evolves and secrets unfold into a darkly comedic exploration of life choices. It runs June 19-July 4, 2026.

    All shows this season will be performed at the Bath House Cultural Center, 521 E. Lawther Dr., in White Rock Lake Park.

    Tickets range from Pay-What-You-Can to $40, with discounts available for students and seniors.

    Additional events this season include Cake by the Lake on April 21, Echo's free birthday party fundraiser that also launches its reading series, Echo Reads.

    Echo Reads runs April through September, presenting six plays in six month. All plays will be performed on Tuesdays at 7:30 pm, and then read the next day at different venues around the city.

    Echo Offstage Podcasts is going monthly. The free podcast series interviews women+ who are making art and making a difference.

    And Echo is already teasing its 29th season, which will begin in the fall of 2026 and run the more traditional September through August instead of the calendar year.

    The season 29 opener is a co-production, the company mysteriously hints, involving three Dallas theaters, two shows, and an internationally known writer. We'll all just have to wait and see what this intriguing production might be.

    echo theatrepodcastsworld premieresecho readsthe roommate playtheater
    news/arts

    most read posts

    New H-E-B grocery store in Forney reveals official opening date

    Sophisticated new cocktail bar heads to familiar East Dallas space

    J. Alexander’s to debut in Plano with famed steaks and carrot cake

    Loading...