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    Belgian Treat

    Designer Walter Van Beirendonck mixes metaphors and silhouettes at Dallas Contemporary

    Kendall Morgan
    kendall Morgan
    Apr 16, 2013 | 8:40 am

    Belgian designer Walter Van Beirendonck is a study in contrasts. Dressed in a zip-up boiler suit with knuckle-duster rings on every finger, he has a physically imposing presence with a soft-spoken demeanor.

    You could say his design aesthetic falls right in line with his persona. On the one hand, his over-the-top pieces are aggressively styled with influences as varied as Papua New Guinea warriors, secret societies and Haitian voodoo. On the other, his tailoring is impeccable, with incongruous fabrics mixed and matched to create surprisingly flattering silhouettes.

    The Belgian designer, who emerged in the mid-’80s as part of the revolutionary Antwerp Six collective (which included Dries Van Noten, Ann Demeulemeester and Dirk Bikkembergs), was in Dallas last weekend to install his exhibition at the Dallas Contemporary. As part of his local appearance, Van Beirendonck decked out the windows of the newly opened Traffic Los Angeles boutique — a partner in the exhibition — with images from his catwalk show in Paris on a video installation.

    Although Van Beirendonck has already been honored with a full-blown retrospective in his native Antwerp, which travels to Melbourne later this year, his Contemporary show highlights his last two collections: spring/summer 2013’s “Silent Secrets” and fall/winter 2012’s “Lust Never Sleeps.” Mannequins are outfitted in ensembles that appear just as they did on the runway, twirling lazily in circles as the viewer gets up close and personal with this very singular talent.

    CultureMap: It’s very rare for a designer to have work on exhibition that is still available for purchase in stores. Can you tell us how the exhibit came about?

    Walter Van Beirendonck: Peter Doroshenko, the executive director of the Dallas Contemporary, asked me to show those two collections, and they were just in fact produced, which is unusual. Museums typically select out of the archive.

    At one side it is more interesting to be [in stores], because you can decide on ideas easier and quicker in fashion, but it is losing its value. Art pieces have a whole life in them; fashion has a six-month cycle.

    CM: This is your first time in Dallas. What are your impressions of the city?

    WVB: It’s the first time I’m traveling across America. Of course, I’ve been to New York many times, but this trip I started in LA and did a lecture at the Otis College of Art and Design. I went to Chicago for a lecture and now in Dallas, which is so different.

    It felt strange arriving here and seeing this big city without people on the streets. The city gives an empty impression, but I was also overwhelmed by the quality and number of museums and galleries.

    CM: You still teach in addition to your design duties and exhibitions. How do you fit it all in?

    WVB: Yes, I’m the head of the fashion department of the Royal Academy of Fine Arts in Antwerp. It’s easier to travel during the holidays, and we just had two weeks off for Easter! I’ve been doing it two days a week since 1985.

    I resisted very quickly after graduating, but I enjoyed [teaching] and did very well — due to my fashion design, I can get into the heads of young people and guide them.

    CM: Can you tell us some of your pupils who have had success?

    WVB: Oh, everybody. Kris Van Assche, Veronique Branquinho, Bernhard Willhelm.

    CM: And are you annoyed they make more money than you do?

    WVB: Well, they definitely do better than I do, but I’m not frustrated by that. They make their careers, and I’m proud of that. I’m the daddy of the Belgian fashion world, and it’s very rewarding to be head of a school that has had that dynamic.

    CM: Speaking of your school, did you know when you and the rest of the “Antwerp Six” were graduating you would have such an influence on the world of fashion?

    WVB: It was very spontaneous and out of frustration to get out of Belgium. We were working for five years from ’80 to ’85 and got to go to London to the British Design show and got international attention. You don’t realize [it’s a moment], because everybody was doing their own thing. We stuck together because it was very practically easier.

    CM: And do you still keep in touch?

    WVB: With everyone except Martin Margiela, who has disappeared for everybody. The 7th of September this year, there’s an opening in Antwerp honoring 50 years of the fashion department, and we found a room created around the team of friendship.

    CM: How do you distill the themes that influence your collections?

    WVB: “Silent Secrets” was a reaction to everything that was going on in the social media world. Everything is over-visible. It’s nice from time to time for things to be more closed, but that’s a luxury you don’t have today. I tried to combine that with secret societies, which have very specific dress codes and formal clothing.

    With “Lust Never Sleeps,” I wanted to create a kind of tension that you could find in Haiti in voodoo. I found books about the rituals, and I put that in with a future dandy and inspiration from Papua New Guinea.

    I used warrior shield patterns and masks to create a kind of tension with all these pieces put into one. I like to mix all the ingredients and create a kind of surprise. I can talk about the check fabric I found in Italy too, which is less interesting!

    ---

    The Walter Von Beirendonck exhibition runs through August 18 at the Dallas Contemporary.

    The Walter Van Beirendonck exhibition at the Dallas Contemporary runs through August 18.

    Walter Van Beirendonck at Dallas Contemporary
    Photo by Jenifer McNeil Baker
    The Walter Van Beirendonck exhibition at the Dallas Contemporary runs through August 18.
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    Season announcement

    Mystic Pizza's Dallas premiere leads new AT&T PAC Broadway season

    Alex Bentley
    Apr 10, 2026 | 1:28 pm
    Mystic Pizza: A New Musical
    Photo courtesy of Lively McCabe Entertainment
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    The 2026-2027 Broadway at the Center season at Dallas' AT&T Performing Arts Center will feature a mixture of new and returning shows, including several recent Tony Award-nominated productions.

    According to a release, the main season will consist of five musicals: Mystic Pizza: A New Musical, Shucked, Beetlejuice, The Who’s Tommy, and The Wiz. All productions take place at Winspear Opera House in downtown Dallas.

    They will be joined by two previously-announced co-productions with Broadway Dallas - The Notebook and Hadestown - as well as TITAS/Dance Unbound co-production, Dance Me - The Music of Leonard Cohen.

    First up will be Dance Me - The Music of Leonard Cohen, a creation inspired by the work of famed Montreal-based poet, artist, and songwriter Leonard Cohen, performed by Ballet Jazz Montreal.

    The homage to the iconic artist evokes the grand cycles of existence in five seasons, as described in Cohen’s deeply reflective music and poems. There will be performances on September 18 and 19, 2026.

    The first theater production will be Mystic Pizza: A New Musical, making its Dallas premiere. It is based on the 1988 rom-com that tells the story of three working-class girls who navigate the complexities of life, love, and family in a small-town pizza joint.

    The score features megahits of the '80s and '90s, including songs originally recorded by Melissa Etheridge, Cyndi Lauper, John Cougar Mellencamp, and more. It will run November 20-22, 2026.

    After the Broadway Dallas co-production of The Notebook, running January 12-24, 2027, the season picks up again with the return of Shucked, which played at the Music Hall at Fair Park in December 2024.

    In the Tony Award-winning comedy, the corn that protects a small community starts to die. The town needs answers. But who will dare to venture beyond the borders of Cob County?

    The Broadway hit, running March 19-21, 2027 is about an unlikely hero, an unscrupulous con artist, and a battle for the heart and soil of a small town.

    Hadestown will follow shortly thereafter, running March 30-April 4, 2027, before the third Broadway Dallas co-production of the season, Beetlejuice, running April 28-May 2, 2027.

    The musical, which previously came to Dallas in early 2024, is based on Tim Burton’s 1988 film and tells the story of Lydia Deetz, a strange and unusual teenager whose whole life changes when she meets a recently deceased couple and a demon with a thing for stripes.

    June 2027 will bring the final two productions of the season, The Who’s Tommy (running June 3-5) and The Wiz (running June 10-13).

    The Who's 1969 rock opera is about the young Tommy Walker whose innate knack for pinball catapults him from reticent adolescent to celebrity savior. It features the anthems “I’m Free,” “See Me, Feel Me,” “Sensation,” and “Pinball Wizard.”

    The Wiz, which just came to Dallas in September 2025, is a groundbreaking twist on The Wizard of Oz that features soul, gospel, rock, and '70s funk that puts Dorothy’s journey to find her place in a contemporary world.

    “This season is designed to welcome both longtime subscribers and new audiences with a lineup that celebrates the full range of Broadway - from high-energy crowd pleasers and reimagined classics to bold contemporary storytelling,” said Warren Tranquada, CEO and President of the AT&T Performing Arts Center, in a statement.

    For the first time in their partnership with Broadway Dallas, Broadway at the Center subscribers will enjoy early access and full subscriber benefits for Beetlejuice through May 1.

    After May 1, all ticket purchases, customer service questions, and support for Beetlejuice will be handled directly by Broadway Dallas.

    The Center offers a flexible subscription package that allows patrons to choose four or five shows from the season lineup, with the option to add or remove shows by contacting the box office directly.

    Subscription package prices range from $150-$660, and sales begin on Monday, April 13, 2026. Packages may be purchased by phone at 214-880-0202, or online at attpac.org/broadway.

    att performing arts centerbeetlejuicebroadway at the centermusicmystic pizzaperforming-artsthe wiztheaterwinspear opera house
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