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    Your Show of Shows

    Art gallery picks of the month: Selfies, sexy objects and painting comeback

    Kendall Morgan
    kendall Morgan
    Jul 19, 2013 | 11:39 am

    This summer, the art world is hotter than July. In case you’ve forgotten, July 20’s second annual Design District Gallery Day showcases the best of the best art in the ’hood, plus offerings from RE Gallery in the Cedars and Ro2 Art on North Akard Street.

    With five more participating spaces this year, you’ll need every hour from noon to 8 pm to squeeze it all in, but come early to snag one of the 340 gift bags stuffed with collectible tees designed by organizer Brian Gibb.

    More monthly must-sees? A closer look at the “selfie,” painterly progress and an artistically inclined peepshow.

    “SELFI.E., various artists, at Womanorial.com
    
Exhibition dates: July 21-October 19

    Agoraphobic art fans should revel in the curatorial skills of Womanorial.com founders Haley Kattner Allen and Jessica Jannuzzi-Garcia. The twentysomething duo founded their gallery site a year ago to focus on “cyber feminism,” using the Internet as a mobile space where talented women (and men) can show their female-focused art.

    Their latest show highlights photographic, painted, drawn or video “selfies” from 28 artists the founders like to call “Womanorialists.” Some may call the current obsession of sharing self-portraits over social media narcissistic, but the Womanorial ladies feel otherwise.

    “We’re interested in selfies as theme because it’s such a simple thing — the way people relate to their technology while relating to themselves,” says Kattner Allen. “It’s controlling the gaze of another though one’s own personal gaze.”

    Patrons will be able to view the show beginning July 21 at midnight, and although the site doesn’t serve as a retail outlet, interested parties can purchase works by contacting artists through Womanorial.com.

    PAINT, various artists, at Ro2 Art Downtown Gallery
    Opening reception:
    July 20, 7-10 pm

    Exhibition dates: July 20-August 18

    Critics may periodically announce “painting is over,” but the seven participants in this group show beg to differ. Although one of the non-Design District participants in Gallery Day July 20, Ro2 is worthy of a stopover for its show focusing on this consistently maligned medium.

    Ro2’s Jordan Roth and his co-gallerist and mom Susan Roth Romans found some of their favorite artists were currently working in paint, inspiring a collective exhibit of local talent, plus the work of Nigerian artist and current CentralTrak resident Olaniyi Rasheed Akindiya, a.k.a. Akirash. Akirash will also be on hand for the opening with a performance featuring pre-painted dancer Danielle Georgiou.

    “We keep hearing people say, ‘Painting is dead,’ but that’s ridiculous,” Jordan says. “There’s all this focus on gifs and new media, but a lot of our artists happened to be focusing on paintings, so that was one of our motivations. Painting is alive and well!”

    PEEP SHOW, vintage burlesque images and work by Bale Creek Allen and Allison Watson, at Webb Gallery
    Opening reception:
    July 21, 5-8 pm

    Exhibition dates: July 21-October 20

    If you’ve ever wanted to snoop on your neighbor’s love life, Webb Gallery’s “Peep Show” is the exhibit for you. With a series of vintage girly shots and images from burlesque shows of the ’40s to the ’60s, along with collaborative work by Bale Creek Allen (son of musician Terry Allen) and his girlfriend, Allison Walton, “Peep Show” promises to be “sexual, titillating and true to the exhibit’s title.”

    “The body of work they’ve done is very tongue-in-cheek, and things aren’t always as they look,” says gallery co-owner Julie Webb. “Everything in this exhibit is evidence of sex, but it’s presented as something beautiful. You’re going to be titillated, but you’re not really going to see anything.”

    Further thrills are promised with a performance from The Bellfuries, whose rockabilly-inspired songs should provide an alluring soundtrack during the opening reception.

    Anonymous photographer of a burlesque house NY, 1940s, 17 x 71, photo print under acrylic, at Webb Gallery.

    Peepshow at Webb Gallery
    Photo courtesy of Webb Gallery
    Anonymous photographer of a burlesque house NY, 1940s, 17 x 71, photo print under acrylic, at Webb Gallery.
    unspecified
    news/arts

    Dance Off

    Texas ballet company turns Timothée Chalamet dig into genius promotion

    Brianna Caleri
    Mar 13, 2026 | 1:12 pm
    Timothée Chalamet
    Courtesy
    undefined

    It was a shot fired from Austin that rang out around the art world: In a recent CNN/Variety Town Hall featuring actors Timothée Chalamet and Matthew McConaughey, Chalamet offered an assessment of ballet and opera that immediately went viral.

    During the onstage conversation at the University of Texas at Austin, Chalamet said, "I don't want to be working in ballet or opera, or you know, things where it's like, 'hey, keep this thing alive, even though like no one cares about this anymore.' All respect to the ballet and opera people out there. I just lost 14 cents in viewership."

    Chalamet immediately seemed to experience a twinge of regret, awkwardly adding, "But um...damn, I just took shots for no reason." He also sang a note and hid his face behind the cards he was holding.

    Stars of the art forms, from Andrea Bocelli to Misty Copeland, immediately began to leap (jeté, if you will) to the the defense of opera and ballet.

    In a genius marketing move, Austin's hometown ballet company is taking the unique opportunity to turn a hot topic into a promotion for its next production: Ballet Austin is inviting anyone named Timothée, Timothee, or Timothy to claim a free ticket to its upcoming world premiere of Marie Antoinette: Vampire Queen of Versailles, running March 27-29 at the Long Center for the Performing Arts.

    "Timothée… you were in Austin? We were literally down the street," a Ballet Austin post says. "Austin has brisket. Austin has music. Austin also has ballet."

    All Timothées and folks with similar names will have to do to claim a ticket is send a message to Ballet Austin on social media and show identification. Everyone else who wants to see the supernatural show where "the line between victim and villain blurs" will have to purchase a ticket ($25-$125) at balletaustin.org.

    Ballet Austin Marie Antoinette: Vampire Queen of Versailles Ballet Austin isn't afraid to add some edge to classic stories. Photo courtesy of Ballet Austin

    Even if Chalamet's words were dismissive, he's obviously not wrong about the relative distribution of public interest between the classical arts and major films like Marty Supreme, the late 2025 film he stars in and is busy promoting. The film's commercially successful release set a record for A24, an already renowned studio.

    Chalamet brought up ballet and opera in service of a larger point about pacing in movies. He said he exists in a middle ground as a consumer between wanting to be drawn in early and being more patient as a film progresses. Ultimately, he juxtaposed Barbie and Oppenheimer with the classical arts, pointing out that if the masses want to go see a film, they will "be loud and proud about it" organically, without needing performers to advocate for the seriousness of the art form.

    Coincidentally, there couldn't be a better counterpoint to this argument than Marie Antoinette: Vampire Queen of Versailles.

    As the title suggests, the story follows historical figure Marie Antoinette as she chooses to become a vampire, seeking "power, immortality, and vengeance," according to a press release. It takes a somewhat silly premise and gives it dramatic gravitas, with an original score by Austin composer Graham Reynolds, who is known outside of classical circles and sometimes composes for movie soundtracks.

    "For Ballet Austin, the moment is an opportunity to remind audiences that ballet isn’t fading away," says a release about the new promotion. "It’s evolving, drawing new audiences and continuing to thrive in creative cities like Austin."

    If Chalamet really does fall in the middle of instant and delayed artistic gratification, this sounds like the perfect production to draw him in.

    And perhaps Ballet Austin should add people named Matthew to their promotion, since McConaughey threw the younger star a bone after his momentary walk-back, saying, "That's not a shot — I hear what you're saying."

    ---

    Stephanie Allmon Merry contributed to this story.

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