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    Your Show of Shows

    These are the 4 best Dallas art gallery exhibitions this month

    Kendall Morgan
    kendall Morgan
    Aug 25, 2016 | 2:15 pm

    Sexy sculpture, an artistic Texan icon, a beyond vibrant painter, and a final farewell for one tickled-pink installation: Summer ends with some bold, bright moments before the fall arts season kicks off. Here are just a few exhibits for collectors and gallery goers to focus on:

    “Coquette,” Dan Lam, and “9Grams,” various artists, both at Fort Works Art
    Closing reception: September 10, noon-9 pm
    ​Exhibition dates: Now-September 10

    Abstract yet alluring, the large-scale wall pieces and “drippies” from sculptor Dan Lam have a flirtatious appeal all their own. Says the gallery’s co-founder Lauren Childs, “The name of the show is ‘Coquette,’ because it’s beautiful and different and begs to be touched. But in an art gallery/museum, the art is not meant to be touched, so that immediately creates a visceral conflict with the viewer. [Lam] has also titled all the works with very feminine names, many based on popular makeups.”

    Drawn to Lam’s work by her “insanely well-curated Instagram feed,” Childs gave the artist a seven-week residency to produce her oversized wall pieces, a tradition that will continue as Lam is planning to use the space as an ongoing resource to make her larger works.

    Along with “Coquette” is “9Grams,” an all-male show of nine global artists who plumb the same visual territory as Lam, including Hoxxoh, who created a rainbow mural to adorn the outside of the gallery. With an eye for young talent and more ambitious programming coming this fall, Fort Works Art is most definitely one to watch in the coming months.

    “That’s who we want to be,” says Childs. “A gallery that takes risks, supports our own artistic beliefs, and is true to our goal of making a cultural shift for both artists and collectors in Fort Worth.”

    “David Bates: Paintings and Sculptures,” at Talley Dunn Gallery
    Opening reception: August 27, 6-8 pm
    Exhibition dates: August 27-October 29

    With his angular brushstrokes and folk-art-influenced style, David Bates remains uniquely Southern, even as the Dallas-based artist has garnered attention from coast to coast from such institutions as the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and the Metropolitan Museum of American Art.

    For this, his first show in two years at Talley Dunn, Bates once again turns his eye towards the Texas Gulf Coast, exhibiting oystermen, shrimp boats, and crashing waves alongside his iconic floral arrangements and still lifes. Sculptures bring his lines into a third dimension, pulling bold blooms and reclining nudes off the canvas.

    Having said in the past that his painting “has the components of a short story,” it is easy to see a larger dialogue hidden among his brutalist brush strokes. Bates deliberately avoids giving his people and places a specific identification, preferring viewers to fill in the blanks with their own interpretations.

    It’s also not a surprise to learn he has a personal connection with all of his works, especially the ones in this show. Bates says “I would really like to keep most of them. But I have limited space, and the new owners will be the caretakers until the paintings and sculpture end up in museums, hopefully.”

    “If,” new works by Matthew Burdon at Kirk Hopper Fine Art
    Opening reception: August 27, 6-8 pm
    Exhibition dates: August 27-October 1

    Also playing fast and free with narrative is New York-based painter Matthew Burdon, who opens his first solo exhibition for Kirk Hopper this month. His canvases marry abstract accents with figurative subjects, a methodology he has called “an uncomfortable limbo between heady ideas and dumb form.”

    But what makes his pieces so intriguing is the sometimes eye-aching blend of color and pattern. Says the artist, “Color for me is a means to evoke mood. I want to give each painting its own attitude and comportment. Essentially I am trying to thread together visual connections between the sometimes jarring pictorial differences within my paintings."

    “Pink House Show,” Samantha McCurdy and Gina Garza, at 801 Sunset Ave., Dallas
    Closing reception: August 27, 6-10 pm

    One advantage of having a relatively intimate local arts scene is the opportunity it affords for talent to cross-pollinate and turn their ideas into reality as quickly as possible. Pulled together during the Dallas Art Fair, the "Pink House Show," masterminded by local painter Samantha McCurdy at the abode of creative directors/designers Dan Rodriguez and Joseph Steffen, proved to be an Instagrammable hit for the last few months.

    Now the installation, which also serves as a showroom for the duo’s handmade hats, fascinators, and handbags, is set to go down with one last bash, giving fuchsia fans the chance to view the space in all its rosy glory.

    “Sam did such a fabulous job of making the art part of the house,” says Steffen. “You can be immersed in a way you don’t always get to have in a gallery space. People come and say, ‘I can’t stop smiling!’ and I’m like, ‘That’s what it’s for.’ ”

    McCurdy’s vibrant “snug” pieces, as well as Gina Garza’s string art, complement the fashion, and the fact that visitors can walk home with any of the works lets them feel comfortable engaging with both the art and the accessories.

    Says McCurdy, “Everything’s for sale, the art and the products they’ve incorporated into the actual landscape. People play dress up and interact with the space. It’s more fun than just going to an installation, because you are able to wear the art.”

    Those who haven’t made it by yet can RSVP for one last hurrah. Even though the space will no longer exist in its current iteration, Steffen promises more visual delights to come next spring. “Our house is always open and changing.”

    Dan Rodriguez and Joseph Steffen flank artist Samantha McCurdy at her Pink House Show installation in the designers' atelier.

    Samantha McCurdy
    Photo courtesy of Samantha McCurdy
    Dan Rodriguez and Joseph Steffen flank artist Samantha McCurdy at her Pink House Show installation in the designers' atelier.
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    Mural News

    Netflix House will debut in Dallas with murals from acclaimed artist

    Desiree Gutierrez
    Dec 8, 2025 | 12:51 pm
    ​Jeremy Biggers at Netflix House
    Netflix House
    Jeremy Biggers at Netflix House

    A long-awaited immersive venue is opening in Dallas, and it will debut with local art on its walls: Netflix House, a year-round exhibit revolving around Netflix shows and movies, will open at Galleria Dallas on December 11, with two murals from award-winning Dallas multi-medium artist Jeremy Biggers.

    Netflix House is an immersive dive complete with merchandise store, film house, arcade, and restaurant-bar. When it opens, Dallas will be the second location in the U.S., following Philadelphia, where it debuted in November 2025, also with murals from a local artist.

    A graduate of Booker T. Washington High School for Performing and Visual Arts, Biggers is a renowned artist whose murals can be found spashed on walls across Dallas. Many, such as the Selena portrait on the wall outside Top Ten Records at 306 S. Bishop Ave., have become local landmarks.

    He's a logical choice, having worked with a number of corporations including Nike, Adidas, the Dallas Mavericks, and IBM, for whom he created the "THINK" mural in their Dallas corporate office. His works have also been exhibited nationally, including a 2024 solo exhibition "be safe out there bro" at Band of Vices, a gallery in Los Angeles.

    "Being chosen to be the artist to paint this mural, it would have been a disservice to myself, as well as the art scene in the city, not to try to infuse myself into it," he says.

    \u200bJeremy Biggers at Netflix House Jeremy Biggers at Netflix HouseNetflix House

    Biggers did two murals featuring his interpretation of Netflix figures including the Squid Game Young-hee doll, characters from KPop Demon Hunters and megahit series Stranger Things, plus Pandy and DJ Catnip, the best friends in the interactive series Gabby’s Dollhouse.

    Both murals are intensely colored works that incorporate Biggers' signature motif: a grid of polka dots spread across the image.

    • One is on the exterior of Netflix House, at the parking entrance, a colorful collage of characters, measuring 38 feet x 50 feet — the tallest mural Biggers has tackled. He painted it with aerosol; it took him two months to complete.
    • The other is on the interior, on the mall side entrance of Netflix House, measuring 57 feet x 12 feet — a study in moody blacks and blues, with accents of neon-red that give it a 3D effect.

    “I'm trying to tell the story of Netflix, and the story of where Netflix has been historically, where Netflix is headed in the future, and then also infusing my own narrative and my own language visually into that story,” he says.

    “They could have opened this anywhere, so for Dallas to be one of the very first locations — that’s a testament to us as a market, as consumers of arts and consumers in general," he says.

    Jeremy Biggers at Netflix House Jeremy Biggers at Netflix HouseNetflix House

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