These Houston Artists Want You to Plan Your Vote

Two local arts institutions have been tapped to help get out the vote by unveiling exclusive new works.

These Houston Artists Want You to Plan Your Vote

The presence of voting-related content on social media is hard to ignore. From celebrities and activists to everyday citizens, individuals are putting the pressure on their networks to register and vote. Now, in an effort to increase the “visual vocabulary" utilized in this movement, Vote.org has partnered with artists and museums across the county to produce unique content — and some of the most compelling pieces were made right here in Houston.


Two institutions tapped to participate in the nonpartisan Plan Your Vote initiative are DiverseWorks and Blaffer Art Museum at the University of Houston. Plan Your Vote seeks to empower Americans to take action and ownership of their voting rights by connecting citizens with accurate, up-to-date, state-specific information about registration, mail-in and absentee voting, ID requirements, polling locations and other voting-related topics.

The organization partnered with museums, as these institutions have served as sites of civic engagement and dialogue throughout history, to reinforce its messaging and offer increased visibility. Each participating museum has been posting Plan Your Vote campaign images, commissioned from represented artists, on their social media channels, and has added a button to its website, prompting visitors to check out PlanYourVote.org.

A hand-cut map portrait by Nick Vaughan and Jake MargolinA hand-cut map portrait by Nick Vaughan and Jake Margolin

Blaffer just unveiled a creation by New York-based neo-conceptual artist Jenny Holzer, who is known for her text-based public art. In her animated post for Plan Your Vote, neon letters scroll by, sending the message: “Intelligence is the ability to adapt to change. Register early, vote early." It's capped off with an unmissable neon-purple, all-caps reference to PlanYourVote.org. Holzer's personal page touts other, more partisan messages presented in the same way.

Both Blaffer and DiverseWorks posted a promotional image created by Nick Vaughan and Jake Margolin, Houston-based interdisciplinary artists whose street-savvy aesthetic incorporates hand-cut maps, striking black backgrounds and ample negative space. The duo's creation for Plan Your Vote was based on a photograph of Houston drag queen JJ Farmer taken in the backyard of Mary's, Naturally in 1976.

DiverseWorks has also featured a piece by Vincent Valdez, a Houston oil painter who grew up in a working-class, mainly Mexican community, and who has historically used his art to help dissect his identity as a Mexican-American. Subject matter of past works has included the KKK and the passing of Muhammad Ali. Valdez's Plan Your Vote image “Requiem" depicts an eagle overlaid with block letters that spell out the campaign. On his personal page, Valdez posted the shot and made the plea: “If you look at what a society does to its most vulnerable, then you see what it eventually intends to do to us all. Vote. It won't instantly fix an oppressive system. But it's a good place to start."

AT TOP: “Requiem" by Vincent Valdez

Art + Entertainment
Thrive & Inspire: Working with Seniors — ‘America’s Best’ — a Joy for Medicare Expert Justin White

Justin White, Founder of Senior Health Services

WHAT IS THE secret to running a successful business? First, you have to have a mission that you care about. I absolutely love helping people understand Medicare! Secondly, I have always succeeded because the agents I work with know that I care for them and truly want them to succeed. I love developing leaders and watching them soar! If I help them get where they want to be, I will never need to worry about me! We all rise together.

Keep Reading Show less

Bianca Bucaram, founder of The Bucaram PR Group and BXM Music

Get to Know Bianca:

Bianca Bucaram, founder of The Bucaram PR Group and BXM Music, is a dynamic force in the public relations industry. She is known for her tenacity, empathy, and bilingual communication skills. As a local publicist with national reach, she blends local insights with broader impact, telling compelling stories that foster business growth and create opportunities.

Keep Reading Show less

The pool at Zen

THE MANAGER OF Grand Velas Riviera Maya says a funny thing as she tours a writer around the 206-acre all-inclusive between Cancun and Tulum. “I still get lost sometimes. If I forget what I’m doing and stop looking at the signs, I wind up in the parking lot.”

Keep Reading Show less
People + Places