Waxing Poetic

Retired from a career in oil, an artist and gallery director brings a revitalized perspective to city skylines.

Things Are Looking Up 11

Iowa-born artist Joel Anderson moved to Houston right out of college and took a job with Shell, where he “sat behind the computer for 33 years.” But he spent his weekends making art in a variety of mediums, including stained glass and wood-working. Now retired at the tender age of 60 — with plenty of time for artistic experimentation thanks in part to a generous pension — Anderson is much happier these days following his creative muse. “It makes me spring out of bed in the morning,” he says. “To get on with things, get the day going, and get some art created.”  

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Art+Culture

Memories of Mexico

Starring in HGO’s new Christmastime production ‘El Milagro del Recuerdo,’ Cecilia Duarte explores the meaning of home for the holidays.

Ashkan Roayaee
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In his classic Christmas tune, Perry Como sings, “There’s no place like home for the holidays,” pulling at the heart strings of even the greenest grinches among us. Mezzo-soprano Cecilia Duarte captures that sentimental longing in the leading role of HGO’s world premiere El Milagro del Recuerdo/The Miracle of Remembering, Dec. 5-22. A prequel to Cruzar la Cara de la Luna, the Mexican-American immigration story that debuted at HGO back in 2010 and was the world’s first mariachi opera, this new production takes a nostalgic trip back to the Velásquez family’s final Christmas in Mexico before they brave the journey to a new life. It’s a lively and touching tale, backed by both a full mariachi band and traditional orchestra, that asks questions about the meanings of family, home and the holidays.

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Art+Culture

An Absurdist’s Odyssey

With a tone of tongue-firmly-planted-in-literary-cheek self-seriousness, Mark Haber’s new novel is both convoluted and captivating.

In a recent article on LitHub, the highly regarded online literary journal, Houston novelist Mark Haber described how little-known Swiss-Colombian writer Mila Menendez Krause influenced his latest book. He writes, “I read [Krause’s] book on the sands of [Namibia’s] Skeleton Coast, completely neglecting my two sons, throwing shells and shards of broken glass in their direction to keep them at bay, to buy myself more time with a book that, once finished, took me weeks to recover from.” The piece sent literary New York into a frenzy in search for books by Krause. 

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Art+Culture