'Kind' Hearts

Offering some holiday hope, the Houston organization KIND provides pro bono legal help to asylum-seeking children.

Brett Gundlock

A larger-than-life Christmas tree shines brightly in front of City Hall; families ice skate hand-in-hand in the center of the Galleria; high schoolers dart to River Oaks to snap the perfect Instagram pic under tree lights. These scenes are emblematic of the holidays in Houston. But there are other kids in town struggling through complicated legal battles this season. In fact, Harris County welcomes the most unaccompanied asylum-seeking children in the whole country. But Houston is also home to KIND, Kids in Need of Defense, a national organization that offers pro bono legal representation to children fleeing violence for safety and hope in the U.S.

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Wellness+Giving Back

Mind the Gap!

A socially savvy pre-teen sees an opportunity to create an inclusive arts space — and the rest of her family helps make it happen.

Lisa Eicher
web

It’s a Tuesday evening, after-hours, and a group of artists in Spring Valley Village are hard at work. Amy, a soft-spoken artist with Down syndrome who entered the wide-open space wearing fresh red lipstick, is carefully assembling a whimsical, 3D sculpture made of found objects. She weaves yarn around a white shoe, then adds multicolored beaded necklaces, one at a time. A small stuffed animal peeks a beaded eye through a web of rope and string, and a toy car sits on the table off to the side, waiting to find its place within the masterpiece. 

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Wellness+Giving Back

Draw Deal

Illustrator and comics-maker Sarah Welch leverages her extensive artist network to make a lasting impression.

Johnny Than

Artist, illustrator and comics-maker Sarah Welch epitomizes the idiom “everything’s bigger in Texas” in her work: Downtown denizens may have noticed her epic, billboard-sized illustration on Main, depicting travelers reading on a train. Welch also soars with her newest installation, a 27-foot-wide South Texas landscape triptych in IAH’s Terminal C. But even her comics, meant to be hand-held and enjoyed at a smaller scale, are larger-than-life. The latest chapter of her comic-book series releases in November; Brazos Bookstore hosts a launch party on Nov. 8.

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Art+Culture