Booted From its Longtime Building, Artist Collective Seeks a New Home for ‘Life-Affirming’ Work
Feb. 1, 2024
HOP OFF THE Metro Rail at Wheeler and find your bearings between what used to be a Fiesta grocery store (now “climatetech incubator” Greentown Labs) and the brutalist-styled and somewhat uninviting ION Building (“Houston’s HQ for innovation!”). Then follow the traffic up San Jacinto, and suddenly you encounter Quilt Peace, a dramatic, colorful, powder-coated steel sculpture by artist, educator, and executive director and co-founder of the Community Artists’ Collective Michelle Barnes.
Inspired by the collaborative nature of quilt-making, Quilt Peace stands at the entrance to the Bermac Arts building, which since 2014 has housed The Collective’s offices, exhibition space, and gift shop. Last December, Barnes and her staff were abruptly informed the building had been sold, and they had until August 2024 to vacate. The news was a shock, although not entirely unexpected, given the relentless march of gentrification that continues to impact Houston’s historic Third Ward and the city as a whole.
Painting by CAC's Aesha Lee
Khaili Sam-Sin, Shani Crowe, Michelle Barnes, Janice Bond, Josie Pickens (photo by Terry St. John)
Michelle Barnes with two young friends at CAC (photo by Terry St. John)
“We have a place to be until August, but in the meantime, we’ve got to find something that’s appropriate, especially for our exhibition and education programs,” says Barnes, who hopes The Collective can remain in the Midtown/Third Ward area and avoid becoming another statistic of gentrification. “There ought to be a place for us in this mix,” says Barnes regarding the changing landscape of the neighborhood. “Does it all have to be a wealthy enclave, or can it be a mixed socio-economic environment?”
Since its inception in 1987, when Barnes and her team operated out of an upstairs corner studio in the Midtown Art Center, The Collective has addressed the needs of Houston’s African-American artists, particularly African-American women artists, while serving as a cross-cultural, educational hub committed to making the arts accessible and inclusive to all communities of Houston. The non-profit organization offers art instruction for children and adults, including a monthly Jubilee Quilt Circle, where participants learn and share their knowledge of quilt-making, community development, and entrepreneurship programs, and special events like last December’s Ashé market, featuring a curated selection of gift items made by local artisans, as well as various African fabrics, masks, and other art pieces.
The Collective is also known as a space, albeit small in square footage, for some of the city’s most provocative, engaging exhibitions. For his simultaneously elegiac and life-affirming 2022 on-site installation Coffee/Kool Aid and the Tabernacle of (Re)Memory, artist Viktor Givens filled and transformed The Collective with found objects recovered from vacant and abandoned African-American residential estates. Later that year, Brian Ellison and Khaili Sam-Sin presented Nuanced Black in the space, a group show of Black MFA candidates at the University of Houston, who remain severely underrepresented in MFA art programs. The Collective’s initiative to not only show but guide artists in the business of being an artist has had a significant impact across the Houston art scene. “The word is that Houston is a very welcoming, warm place that is supportive of artists,” says Barnes. “I think that we’ve had something to do with that.”
Despite the stress involved in the search for a new home, The Collective is staying active, thanks to the efforts of its staff and volunteers. The organization’s children’s educational programming, led by talented Houston artists, continues at community centers such as the Julia C. Hester House and SHAPE Community Center in the Fifth Ward. Barnes herself can be found teaching these classes. “I do it to keep grounded in this work,” says Barnes. “Because if I just did the administration, it would be a death knell.” Meanwhile, the Jubilee Quilt Circle continues its second Thursday workshops, with a variety of instructors leading a class of 10 in the art of quilting. And opening Feb. 1 in celebration of Black History Month is Here and Now: Cultural Expressions, an exhibit of art from The Collective’s permanent collection, including works by Dominic Clay, Mark Francis, Ann Johnson, Latonia Allen, Gail P. Mallory, Ibraim Nascimento, and many others. That same month, Houston artist, DJ, and historian Tierney Malone teams up with The Collective and the Community Music Center for a music-themed exhibition at Hogan Brown Gallery in the renovated historic Eldorado Ballroom.
If 37 years ago, The Collective was born out of a need to fill a void in the cultural landscape, Barnes remains committed to filling that void and inspiring connectivity and cooperation between disparate communities and organizations.
“American culture is really competitive in its nature,” says Barnes. “That’s why it’s so wonderful that artists are supportive of each other, generally, and that this environment, the arts and culture community, is inclusive and becoming more so. I see that happening, and I hope we won’t have to keep stepping back in order to go forward.”
From Your Site Articles
- Through Lenses of 12 Black Artists, CAMH Presents Visual History of Houston’s Freedmen’s Town ›
- Christopher Paul Creates Wearable Masterpieces — and Encourages Viewers to ‘Untether’ from Racism ›
- In First Show From New Collective, UH Grad Students Explore ‘Emergence’ ›
- Stay Cool This Weekend: Explore This ‘Jewel’ of a New Exhibit Celebrating Black Music Month ›
- Unexpected Layers Wait to Be Discovered at this Annual Quilt Show ›
- Using Old Photos, Knickknacks and Other Found Objects, Artist Transforms Gallery Into Space 'to Remember' ›
- Multimedia Exhibit Pays Tribute to the Houston Music Scene's Global Impact - Houston CityBook ›
- Here's a Peek of What's Next for Midtown's Ion District - Houston CityBook ›
Related Articles Around the Web
Keep Reading
Show less
FAMILY RELATIONSHIPS, AND the sometimes-fraught dynamic between fathers and sons, is the subject of Pictures from Home, a poignant and humorous “memory play” written by Sharr White based on photographer Larry Sultan’s 1992 photo memoir of the same name.
Now running through Feb. 11 at the Alley Theatre, Pictures stars Zachary Fine as Larry Sultan, who takes it upon himself to capture the inner lives of his aging parents by casting them in a series of artfully staged photographs doing ordinary things, like reading the newspaper or fixing the vacuum cleaner. Alley Resident Acting Company member Todd Waite plays against type as Larry’s macho dad Irving, whose emotions and vulnerability are exposed over the course of his son’s project; the role was played by Nathan Lane on Broadway in 2023. Susan Koozin stars as Larry’s loving but comically sharp mother Jean; and Rob Melrose directs. In a brilliant bit of meta-staging, photos of the real Larry Sultan’s mom and dad are projected onto screens that drop in and out of the set, prompting the characters onstage to comment upon and critique the images.
Todd Waite as Irving and Zachary Fine as Larry Sultan
Pictures from Home is enjoying a homecoming of sorts, as the work was initially developed and presented as a reading to enthusiastic audiences at the Alley All New Festival in 2020. A fully realized Houston production for the Alley’s Hubbard Theatre stage was preempted by the COVID-19 pandemic, and the play found its way to Broadway for a February 2023 run starring Nathan Lane, Zoe Wannamaker, and Danny Burstein. Given that Pictures began as a work-in-progress in Houston, White was keen to have the Alley be the first to present the play post-Broadway.
“The Alley’s audiences will witness a production that’s both unique and different from the Broadway rendition,” said Melrose in a statement. “We couldn’t be more excited to share this special experience with them.”
From Your Site Articles
- Director of Alley’s Coming-of-Age Comedy ‘High School Play’ on Why It Connects with the Masses ›
- Hilariously Depressing New Show Paints Picture of Millennials’ Cubicle Plight ›
- Alley’s New Season Boasts a Housemade Broadway Hit, a World Premiere Based on Ella Fitzgerald, and More ›
Related Articles Around the Web
Keep Reading
Show less