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    Mix It Up

    Dallas' Nasher Sculpture Center mixes up its collection for new exhibition

    CultureMap Create
    Jun 7, 2021 | 12:15 pm
    Dallas' Nasher Sculpture Center mixes up its collection for new exhibition
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    Even in today's digital world, the mixtape is not dead — at least, not if the Nasher Sculpture Center has anything to say about it.

    The current exhibition "Nasher Mixtape," which is on display through September 26, 2021, brings together old favorites and recent acquisitions for an experience that's totally unique. It's a compilation of "tracks," or micro-exhibitions, focused on the Nasher's permanent collection and installed throughout the museum.

    Several historical works are also making their debut here — nearly one-third of the works on view inside the museum have never been shown at the Nasher, and others have not been exhibited for many years.

    The newest additions to the collection — by the likes of Judy Chicago, Melvin Edwards, Maren Hassinger, and Nicole Eisenman — take important strides in the ongoing work of diversifying the collection through the inclusion of more women and artists of color, as well as celebrating the endlessly inventive approaches artists take to sculpture.

    Here's a preview of what you can expect when visiting "Nasher Mixtape."

    Track 1 / "Into the Garden"
    The sculptures at the Nasher's entrance reference nature in their materials and themes, inviting visitors to continue into the garden, which architect Renzo Piano described as "the museum without a roof."

    Track 3 / "The Ends of Minimalism"
    This installation examines the legacies of Minimal art through the Nashers' support in the 1970s of artists including Siah Armajani, Martin Puryear, and Christopher Wilmarth, as well as the recent acquisition of a sculpture by Judy Chicago.

    Track 5 / "Lookin' down on my soul now"
    Taking its title from lyrics to Flying Lotus' song "Never Catch Me," featuring rapper Kendrick Lamar, this installation brings together a video work by lauren woods with sculptures by Joel Shapiro and Manuel Neri to reflect upon how we interpret images of historical events and human actions.

    Track 9 / "Love and Delight"
    At a time when the formation and sustenance of our connections with others have become more crucial than ever, "Love and Delight" offers a selection of works collected by the Nashers between 1967 and 1986 that trace unexpected links between artworks through the human bonds shared among artists, collectors, dealers, families, friends, spouses, lovers, and admirers.

    Track 10 / "The Guerrilla Girls"
    A selection of posters from the 1980s and 1990s by the anonymous collective targets museums, galleries, curators, collectors, writers, and artists seen as either responsible for or complicit in the exclusion of women and non-white artists from mainstream exhibitions and publications.

    Nasher Mixtape is on view at the Nasher Sculpture Center through September 26, 2021.

    "The Guerilla Girls" is a selection of posters from the 1980s and '90s from the anonymous collective.

    Nasher Mixtape The Guerilla Girls
    Photo courtesy of Nasher Sculpture Center
    "The Guerilla Girls" is a selection of posters from the 1980s and '90s from the anonymous collective.
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    RIP Albert

    Colorful and iconoclastic Dallas artist Albert Scherbarth dies at 70

    Teresa Gubbins
    Feb 19, 2026 | 11:44 am
    Albert Scherbarth
    Courtesy
    Dallas artist Albert Scherbarth

    Dallas artist Albert Scherbarth, known for his jubilant creativity which he displayed in a wide range of media, died on February 18; he was 70 years old. According to friends, he suffered a heart attack.

    Scherbarth's myriad "canvases" ranged from printmaking to furniture to steel and metal working. He was a colorful presence in the Dallas art scene with a shock of thick hair that stood tall, definitive horn-rimmed glasses, and an unfiltered, no-nonsense personal style.

    He was also a key figure in the Cedars District: an urban pioneer who settled in the area directly south of downtown Dallas in the early '80s when the neighborhood was a mostly-deserted collection of abandoned warehouses, before it became a major art nexus.

    A post by Lee Harvey's, the Cedars District bar, said that "Some people don’t just live in a neighborhood — they leave their mark on it. Albert did exactly that. Through his art, his presence, and his time at our bar, he became part of the story here. We’ll miss him more than we can say. Rest easy Bert."

    He was a real character, as well — a stocky physical presence (he played football in high school) who'd fix his stare upon you as if you were a critter to be studied.

    One friend said, "I always feel that Albert is going to spring some meta shit on me every time i see him and he rarely disappoints. What a cool cat."

    A native of Nebraska, Scherbarth moved to Dallas in 1979 to earn a master's in fine arts at the University of Dallas, Irving. After graduating in 1981, he began teaching in the community college district, including Brookhaven College, Northlake College, University of Texas at Dallas, and the Creative Art Center, as well as at Dallas' Arts Magnet.

    Albert Scherbarth Sculpture by Albert Scherbarth which appeared at the State Fair of Texas in 2018.Laura Walters/Facebook

    After graduating from art school, he felt the need to do "real" work like his father, and took jobs in construction and woodwork, which helped shape the very physical nature of his art.

    He was one of the early and many artists who resided in the Continental Gin Building, where he worked on his designs and commissions, fabricated other artists’ ideas, and helped galleries with installations, crating, and shipping.

    Through the years he made furniture, got into fused and cast glass, poured concrete countertops, and painted, including a successful era of doing giant flower paintings. In his latter years, he acquired a welding machine and worked with builders, designers, and architects constructing screens, fences, furniture, and sculptures.

    His works around town include a giant wine tree for Fleming Steakhouse in Frisco, and a sculpture named, "Cecil, age 12" up on Henderson Avenue at Capital Street which was was a finalists for the Henderson Art Prize. He also worked on the famed Bowler Hat sculpture in the Cedars.

    In an interview with Voyage Dallas, he said, "I’m constantly looking for more meaning and more permanence in the work that I’m doing," and acknowledged that "I’ve been very, very fortunate to get a lot of really great commissions over the years. I’ve sold a lot of work and fallen into great studio situations – large spaces, cheap rent and wonderful landlords. Today, I think my ignorance of all the pitfalls ahead allowed me to storm through life and I have a certain stubbornness, a dogged determination to succeed."

    "My grandfathers died before I came of age, my father died, my favorite uncle died so there was not much in the way of male guidance or perspective on how to be a man, so I’ve just kind of made it up on my own, stumbling through, winging it and I’m still alive, amazingly enough."

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