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Your Show of Shows

Essential Dallas gallery exhibits to start an artful 2016

Kendall Morgan
kendall Morgan
Jan 8, 2016 | 12:45 pm

January’s art gallery shows give us the rare opportunity to indulge (nearly) all the senses. From conceptual works that can be perceived as mirthful or menacing to a multifaceted exploration of France’s most famous female writer, there’s a lot to examine.

You can look, listen, and even smell. But remember not to touch!

“The Mythology of Love,” Celia Eberle at Cris Worley Fine Arts
Reception: January 9, 6-8 pm
Exhibition dates: January 9-February 13

Dallas-based multimedia artist Celia Eberle has a reputation for dark subject matter, yet her exploration of one of the strongest human emotions can almost be perceived as whimsical. At least until you take a deeper look.

An inaugural recipient of the Nasher Sculpture Center artist microgrant, Eberle uses the likes of horses, bats — even little lambs —to explore the subterranean aspects of our psyches.

“Her work is truly magical for the most part,” says gallerist Cris Worley. “The best thing about Celia’s work is it has such layered complexity. There’s a definite playfulness to it, but when you dig, some of the inquiries are into the darker parts of the human experience.”

To reveal the concept of l’amour as fully as possible, the artist has created four signature perfumes sold separately from her sculpted bottles topped with poodles or two-headed kittens. A few works have musical components, trilling the likes of “Moonlight Sonata” or hits by Elvis. One little lamb sculpture with its throat slit is a play on both the wedding and sacrificial altar.

“My basic philosophy is anything that isn’t hard science or math is a myth,” Eberle explains. “That leaves the door open to all sorts of imagery or ideas. I take an oblique approach to a concept just to give you a different perspective on the usual thing.

“I am into the subconscious and the things we try to deny within ourselves, and I think humor and playfulness mitigate that.”

“Tubers. Tablets. Turfs. Tails.” Sharon Kopriva at Kirk Hopper Fine Art
Reception: January 9, 6:30-8:30 pm
Exhibition dates: January 9-February 27

For Houston artist Sharon Kopriva, it’s easy being green. Taking an organic approach to her paintings, sculptures, and drawings, she creates work that literally spills off the walls with a lush and lively verdancy.

Drawing on her Catholic upbringing, her connection to the natural world, and her love for her pet Peruvian hounds, Kopriva settled on the four themes of tubers, tablets, turfs, and tails to tell her story.

“The show is more than just green things; it’s different ways I’ve been working,” she explains. “To me it’s about growth. Nature doesn’t have boxes; it grows beyond the limit of your flower bed, wherever it has decided is a place to be.”

Balancing her epic canvases with undulating sculptures hung with rope, refreshed tiles from the Canton flea market, and delicate drawings, she embraces her various media in a way that’s supernatural, indeed.

“Becoming Colette,” Colette Copeland at Reading Room
Reception: January 16, 6-9 pm
Exhibition dates: January 16-February 20

Author of such works as Chéri and Gigi, Colette embodied the lush lifestyle of the Belle Époque like no other author. Similarly monikered artist Colette Copeland couldn’t help but be intrigued by the French writer’s life and achievements, significantly because of the multiplicity in both of their practices.

“When I was younger, I was compelled to investigate my namesake for potential characteristics we might have shared,” Copeland says. “She was a controversial figure who ruptured social mores, refusing to conform to roles subscribed to females of the time.

“Her writing speaks to gender inequities among Parisienne middle and upper classes. My own work often deals with gender roles and subverting social norms.”

Copeland traveled in France last summer to document the sites where Colette lived, worked, and played, a practice that resulted in a performative journey shared through the artist’s videos, prints, and postcards. Both revealing and obscuring the writer, the works include an original sound work composed, performed, and arranged by Dallin B. Peacock fused with a 1960 recording of Colette reading excerpts of her most famous novels in French.

Although the exhibition is an homage to the writer, there’s no required reading (no pun intended) to attend. “I hope the work inspires people to read or reread [the books],” Copeland says. “But ultimately the work is personal. It's an homage, but also an exploration of self through place and history.”

There will be conversation between Colette Copeland and Glasstire’s Richard Bailey on February 20 at 4 pm, the last day of the exhibition.

“Becoming Colette” runs through February 20 at Reading Room.

Colette Copeland
Photo courtesy of Reading Room
“Becoming Colette” runs through February 20 at Reading Room.
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Artist sues FIFA for $25 million over painted-over Dallas whale mural

Associated Press
Jun 3, 2026 | 11:54 am
Wyland Whaling Wall
Facebook/Wyland
Artist Wyland's Whaling Wall mural being painted over for a FIFA World Cup-related mural in Dallas.

The artist who painted a giant mural on a building in downtown Dallas of life-sized swimming whales has filed a $25 million lawsuit against soccer's international governing body and others, saying they illegally painted over his work to promote the city's upcoming World Cup matches.

The artist Wyland says he hand-painted the sprawling mural that covered roughly 17,000 square feet (1,580 square meters) across two of the building's walls.

The mural stood for nearly three decades before workers began painting over it last month, causing an uproar among residents who admired the mural's grand scale and message of ocean conservation.

The area’s World Cup organizing committee said in a statement that, in place of Wyland's mural, new artwork is planned "that captures this current historical moment and reflects the energy, unity, and global spirit surrounding the World Cup 2026.” It said a portion of Wyland's mural would be preserved.

Wyland filed suit Monday, June 1 in U.S District Court in Dallas saying that World Cup organizers, along with the building's owner and management company, painted over his mural without his consent or even notifying him. He says their actions violated a 1990 federal law passed to protect visual artists from destruction of publicly displayed works.

Wyland is seeking at least $25 million in damages. His lawsuit says world soccer's governing body, FIFA, and other defendants “hastily and irrevocably destroyed a civic landmark” to promote the World Cup.

“Though FIFA claims they were working to develop art for the host city, in truth, they defaced an historic fixture of the host city,” the artist's lawsuit says.

A FIFA spokesperson said Tuesday the federation “has no involvement in this whatsoever” and referred a reporter to the tournament's local organizing committee.

A spokesperson for the North Texas FWC Organizing Committee declined to comment. The committee isn't named as a defendant in the lawsuit.

A spokesperson for Slate Asset Management, which manages the building where the mural was painted over, said in a statement that local World Cup organizers asked Slate in March to donate the mural space for “a new public art installation.”

“Slate is not being compensated in any way for the use of the wall space and was told by the local groups that Mr. Wyland had been notified,” the management company's spokesperson said in an email.

Dallas is hosting more World Cup matches than any of the other sites in the event co-hosted by the U.S., Canada and Mexico, with nine matches set to be played at AT&T Stadium in suburban Arlington, home of the Dallas Cowboys.

Wyland's Dallas mural, titled “Whaling Wall 82,” was finished in 1999 and is among more than 100 similar murals known as Whaling Walls the artist painted around the world to promote the conservation of ocean life.

An online petition protesting the mural's destruction and calling for protecting of public artwork in Dallas has received more than 2,600 signatures.

Wyland's lawsuit alleges violations of the Visual Artists Rights Act, a 1990 federal law that protects artwork of “recognized stature” even if someone else owns the physical artwork.

A judge cited that law in 2018 when he ordered a property owner to pay a group of New York graffiti artists $6.7 million for whitewashing dozens of their spray-painted murals on buildings that once housed a factory in Queens. The ruling was upheld on appeal.

fifa world cup fifa world cup 2026 lawsuit wyland whaling mural murals downtown dallas
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