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    The Power of Light

    Artist James Turrell to unveil hidden skyspace at University of Texas at Austin

    Tyler Rudick
    Jun 30, 2013 | 9:09 am

    As James Turrell continues his three-pronged attack on the art world this summer — with simultaneous retrospectives at the Solomon R. Guggenheim, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston — construction is quietly underway at the University of Texas at Austin, where the acclaimed light artist is finishing up his next Lone Star skyspace.

    With a fall opening date looming just on the horizon, the Austin project has flown under the radar in recent months as Turrell enjoys an unprecedented level of national media attention, including a New York Times Magazine cover story and a piece on CBS This Morning, which both highlighted the Houston project.

    But perched high atop the roof of the university's recently constructed Student Activity Center, Turrell’s relatively small-scale UT skyspace almost seems to revel in its low profile.

    “This is a far different project than the huge Twilight Epiphany space at Rice University,” says Andrée Bober, director of the university’s Landmarks public art program. “I think ours is a very intimate and immersive piece, more like Turrell’s work at the Live Oak Meeting House in Houston.”

    The as-of-yet-unnamed project at UT will seat just under 30 guests and, like Twilight Epiphany, will feature light shows for both sunrise and sunset. As of June, the skyspace’s benches, walls and unique elliptical oculus are complete. Turrell — who has worked on the project for nearly a decade and received $600,000 to design the space — is expected to program the lighting sequences at the end of the summer.

    Helping to see both the University of Texas and Rice projects to fruition has been Austin-based arts supporter Suzanne Deal Booth, a former protege of Houston arts legend Dominique de Menil, who worked as an assistant for Turrell during his last major retrospective at the Whitney Museum in 1980.

    Booth's decades-long friendship with the artist has helped to realize other Texas commissions in private collections as well as a large piece at Austin's Dimensional Fund Advisors, an investment firm founded by her husband, noted businessman David G. Booth. (Sadly, Dallas lost its Turrell skyspace when the artist declared his Tending, Blue at the Nasher Sculpture Center “destroyed,” due to imposing neighbor Museum Tower.)

    “This piece James has created for UT is almost like a hidden treasure,” Booth says. “Students won’t just happen upon it but will have to seek it out on their own. It’s a truly marvelous piece.”

    James Turrell will have a new skyspace opening at UT Austin this fall.

    James Turrell rooftop Skyspace University of Texas at Austin at night
    Rendering by Overland Partners|Architects
    James Turrell will have a new skyspace opening at UT Austin this fall.
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    shop local

    Cool Deep Ellum shop named one of America’s best indie bookstores

    Amber Heckler
    Apr 27, 2026 | 3:33 pm
    Deep Vellum Books, independent bookstores in Dallas
    Deep Vellum Books/Facebook
    Dallas' Deep Vellum Bookstore claimed bragging rights as one of the 20 best independent bookstores in America

    Dallas' Deep Vellum Bookstore is claiming new bragging rights as one of the 20 best independent bookstores in America, according to a new guide from Condé Nast Traveler.

    The list was published in celebration of Independent Bookstore Day on April 25 — but every day can be Indie Bookstore Day when you're supporting your local shop rather than a national chain like Amazon or Barnes and Noble.

    Indie bookstores and physical media have been having a much needed renaissance in today's digital (and AI slop-filled) era. More than 400 new bookshops opened in 2025 alone, the American Booksellers Association reported, and local bookstores are welcome third spaces for many literature loving individuals.

    Deep Vellum won the title as the best indie bookstore in the Lone Star State, outshining several other popular Texas booksellers. Located at 3000 Commerce St. in Dallas' Deep Ellum neighborhood, Condé Nast said the bookshop serves as "one of the country’s premier translators of contemporary global literature."

    "As esoteric as its collection may seem, the bookstore itself makes exploration approachable," wrote editorial assistant Kat Chen. "Crack into a can of craft beer, gaze at the wall plastered with polaroids of smiling patrons, and tuck into an engrossing read on one of the tweed armchairs."

    Deep Vellum was founded by Will Evans in 2013 as a community-focused literary arts center and nonprofit publishing house for diverse international literature, as well as local Dallas writers. The bookstore soon followed in 2015, and operations have now expanded to five publishing imprints that produce half English-original works and half international literature.

    This mighty bookshop and publishing house has long proved its staying power even after its federal funding was axed last year. In early April, the organization revealed it would launch its inaugural Deep Vellum Music and Literature Festival from July 10-12, 2026.

    "Through literary readings, author panels, spoken word, live music performances, and community activations this festival will bring voices from across Texas and around the world," a press release said.

    Until then, Condé Nast provided some recommended reading for Dallas bibliophiles that want to check out some (new-to-you) literary and psychological fiction: Tram 83 by Fiston Mwanza Mujila (translated by Roland Glasser) and Miss MacIntosh, My Darling by Marguerite Young.

    dallasindie bookstoredeep ellumbookstoresconde nast traveler
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