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    Your Show of Shows

    Art gallery picks of the month: JFK tributes and death of the American dream

    Kendall Morgan
    kendall Morgan
    Oct 31, 2013 | 3:22 pm

    In November, the art world has decided en masse to commemorate one of Dallas’ most significant historical events: the 50th anniversary of the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

    Already the focus of the Dallas Museum of Art’s “Hotel Texas” exhibition earlier this year, Kennedy is also in the spotlight at the current “The Assassination of Present Kennedy and 13 Days + 13 Nights: The Cuban Missile Crisis” exhibit from Judy Jashinsky at Cohn Drennan Contemporary, as well as a series of shows throughout the month.

    Viewers can investigate the cultural impact of the assassination at Gray Matters Gallery, take a look at some legendary photos from those fateful days at Barry Whistler, or explore an art and artisan commemoration of the Kennedy legacy at the Sixth Floor Museum store. Finally — for something completely different — James Cope has curated a mix of video from auteurs such as Larry Clark and Spike Jonze in an exhibition that showcases the dystopia of modern America.

    “Video Days,” various artists, at SMU’s Pollock Gallery
    Reception: November 1, 5-8 pm

    Exhibition dates: November 1-December 13

    They say the “American dream” is dead, and British curator James Cope would agree. Drawing on themes of social stereotypes, freedom, prosperity, opportunity and success, Cope has gathered work from some visual heavy hitters for “Video Days” at SMU.

    With a name drawn from the original title of a legendary skateboard video from Spike Jonze, “Video Days” also includes work by Larry Clark (Kids), Florian Drexel, Nicolas Provost, Christopher Samuels and Ryan Wolfe. Cope will give attendees an insight into his inspiration for the show in a gallery talk November 13 at 7 pm.

    “It’s about what it means to be young person in America today,” says Cope, a native of Brighton Beach. “There’s a thread running through it which is a subtle comment from me on the bourgeois society that was made up in the 1950s.

    “When you watch a movie like Kids or anything Larry Clark or Harmony Korine has done, they’re commenting on this very real America. It’s not all the 1 percent.”

    “Three Shots: Iconic Photographs From November 1963,” Bob Jackson, at Barry Whistler Gallery
    Artist’s reception: November 2, 1-3 pm

    Exhibition dates: November 1-30

    On the spot during one of the most significant days of the 20th century, Dallas Times Herald staff photographer Bob Jackson was at Love Field when Kennedy first arrived in Dallas on November 22, 1963. Gallerist Barry Whistler has brought Jackson’s most impactful images to the walls of his Deep Ellum space, showing Kennedy’s arrival, as well as a motorcade moment and the iconic image of Lee Harvey Oswald being shot by Jack Ruby.

    “We went to the effort of tracking down [Jackson] and pitching the idea to him,” Whistler says. “We’re trying to have a little different take on the anniversary.

    “For so long I was struggling with what I can do, but we made the galleries dark in the back room and brought the lighting down. It’s an homage during the month of November.”

    The 13-by-19-inch prints will be sold in an edition of 25 — a perfect opportunity to take home a bit of history — and Jackson will be on hand for an artist’s reception November 2.

    Kettle Art, various artists, at the Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza
    Opening:
    November 11, noon
    Exhibition dates: Ongoing

    Deep Ellum gallery Kettle Art opened its doors again in September after a four-month hiatus, and artist Frank Campagna’s labor of love continues to grow with an ongoing collaboration with the Sixth Floor Museum. Ironically, it was Campagna’s pitching of his 3 Nice Guys painting (picturing Kennedy, Oswald, LBJ and Jack Ruby) to the Sixth Floor’s curators that led to the pairing, even though the work was originally turned down.

    “They asked me to contribute to their living memories video collection in January. During the course of talking about where I was when Kennedy got shot and when I had the Dead Kennedys playing at my art studio, I mentioned the piece I did. I brought it to them and got a rejection email!”

    Kettle marketing director Paula Harris stepped in to the rescue, and now not only is 3 Nice Guys now for sale at the museum, but artists represented by Kettle will be taking over a permanent 300-square-foot enclave in the gift shop, selling art and crafts inspired by everything from the assassination to the culture of Dallas and Deep Ellum.

    “The Artists Commission,” various artists, at Gray Matters Gallery
    Artist’s reception:
    November 22, 7-9 pm
    Exhibition dates: November 22-December 14

    Finally, the legacy of the cultural side of the assassination has inspired a show curated by Dallas artist Sally Warren at Gray Matters Gallery. Nineteen Dallas-Fort Worth-based and nationally known artists are exhibiting pieces ranging from traditional paintings to a sound performance of artists reciting everything Oswald said in his statement to the police.

    “Everything the city was doing was dignified and superficial without looking at any of the things we’ve learned in the last five decades,” Warren says. “This show is really more about celebrity and commodity and identity.

    “Artists look at the underlying things, and the idea is to reflect on what Dallas is now, what Texas is now and find some meaning in this 50-year-old event.”

    Laray Polk at Gray Matters Gallery.

    Laray Polk 1963 at Gray Matters Gallery in Dallas
    Photo courtesy of Gray Matters Gallery
    Laray Polk at Gray Matters Gallery.
    unspecified
    news/arts

    Balloon News

    Global art exhibit Balloon Museum bounces immersively into Dallas

    Teresa Gubbins
    Oct 23, 2025 | 1:14 pm
    Balloon Museum
    Balloon Museum
    Balloon Museum

    A new museum tour featuring huge airy installations — also known as balloons — is coming to Dallas: Called Let’s Fly – Art Has No Limits, it's a multisensory exhibition from an entity called the Balloon Museum, and it will touch down at Dallas' South Side Studios at 2901 Botham Jean Blvd. on Saturday, November 22, where it will reside until April 16, 2026.

    Created by Italy-based Lux Entertainment, Let’s Fly will feature huge artworks spanning more than 65,000 square feet. Rooted in the concepts of flight, freedom, and lightness, the exhibition explores air as both a physical element and a symbol of movement and limitless travel.

    According to a release, Lux Entertainment specializes in traveling as well as site-specific exhibitions that combine monumental artworks, engaging environments, and live performances. In June 2024, an Italian investor SIMEST (CDP Group) pledged $5.8 million to expand Lux into the U.S., spawning the creation of the first permanent Balloon Museum overseas.

    Their mission is to transform entertainment into a personal journey, where the audience is not a spectator but a protagonist via innovative formats such as Balloon Museum, This is Wonderland, Christmas World, and Color Hotel.

    Balloon Museum was founded in Rome in 2021 as a pioneering art space dedicated to showcasing inflatable and air-based contemporary installations that merge creativity, technology, and sensory exploration. They have four main exhibitions: Pop Air, EmotionAir, Let’s Fly, and Euphoяia, which have toured across three continents.

    Let's Fly previously stopped in Austin and, simultaneous to Dallas, it will also stop in Houston, as well.

    The dozens of artists featured in each exhibit vary from city to city; Dallas' Let’s Fly – Art Has No Limits stop will include:

    • “Squeezed In,” an installation inhabited by oversized characters, by Lucas Zanotto
    • “Her Joy,” a mirrored sphere that breathes and reflects light like a resonating body, by Alex Schweder
    • “Crazy Love for Polygons" explores geometric forms, by Cyril Lancelin
    • “Balloon Tree,” uniting nature and artifice, by Myeongbeom Kim
    • “Lava Lamp,” a 44-meter psychedelic and breath-like installation inspired by the iconic 1963 lamp, by Michael Shaw
    • “BB,” using hundreds of balloons to explore symmetry and reflection, by Tadao Cern

    One notable piece is Christopher Schardt's “Mariposa”, a 26-foot butterfly sculpture with 39,000 LEDs, which was first presented at Burning Man 2023.

    Dallas seems to have a child-like rapture for big bouncy round things — from the Yayoi Kusama pumpkins at the Dallas Museum of Art to Bubble Planet, the immersive experience with larger-than-life bubbles which makes its debut at Grapevine Mills on October 23.

    “With its world-class arts scene and bold, design-driven landscape, Dallas offers the perfect backdrop for Balloon Museum’s “Let’s Fly,” says Lux Entertainment founder Roberto Fantauzzi in a statement. “We’re proud to bring an exhibition that reflects the city’s scale and spirit — dynamic, creative, and constantly in motion, always reaching for what’s next.”

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