Feb
29
6:30 PM18:30

“Lost and New Horizons: Re-Imagining Houston’s New Ecologies” a talk w/ Jaime González

SAVE THE DATE: FEBRUARY 29TH, 6:30PM @ POSThtx

LOST and NEW HORIZONS:

Re-Imagining Houston’s New Ecologies

a conversation between naturalist, Jaime González and Henry G. Sanchez

CLIMATE MIGRATION TALK: FEB. 29, THURSDAY, 6:30pm – 7:45pm @ POST, 401 Franklin HTX 77201

What happened to the Eden of the Texas Gulf Coast, before the European colonists appeared? Can we return to the “pristine” before 1492, and did it ever exist? Jaime and Henry talk about the new types of ecologies that have emerged Houston has been undergoing since the arrival of humans in the Ice Age. And they consider does what this means now in the age of globalization and rapid, cascading change. They will talk about how scientific, artistic, philosophical, environmental, conservationist, spiritual, moral, legal, local, and Indigenous voices need to converse with each other about what is necessary for a healthy biodiverse ecosystem amidst Houston’s urban sprawl.

Jaime González is an award-winning ecologist, environmental educator, communicator, and collaborative leader who has worked in the Houston and Texas conservation movement for 25 years. His work centers restoration and teaching about nature for climate resilience, human health and wellbeing, and wildlife support - particularly in disinvested communities. He is also passionate about connecting children into the wonders of nature and placemaking through restoration, storytelling, and photography. Jaime proudly serves as board chair for the North American Association for Environmental Education (NAAEE), the institution which sets the standards for high quality environmental education in the US and beyond.

View Event →
Nov
7
to Nov 9

"LANDS – Portrait of the City of Houston", Nov. 7, 8, and 9th, 6:30pm at the MATCH

Im happy to announce a recent participatory collaboration with the French artists Jocelyn Cottencin and Emmanuelle Huynh. The film and performance premier on Nov. 7, 8, and 9th, 6:30pm at MATCH BOX 2, 3400 Main Street, Houston, TX, 77002. See below for details.

LANDS – Portrait of the City of Houston is a performance and film installation developed by the French artists Jocelyn Cottencin and Emmanuelle Huynh.

LANDS examines the past and present of Houston and its growth toward becoming the 4th largest city in the United States and invites audiences to reimagine the city’s possible future. The evening will feature a series of outdoor performances that Cottencin and Huynh choreographed with their Houston-based collaborators: Ayla Davis, Anthony Almendárez, Liyen Chong, Roger Moore, Isabella Mireles, and Henry G. Sanchez, who will then guide the audience from the outdoors into the MATCH theater to experience the film installation.

LANDS expands on ideas of plurality, and the connections or disconnections between personal and cultural memory and local history, braiding together a unique chronology of the city that is part documentary, part poetic narrative, and part futuristic re-imaging of the local geography. The artists invite the audience to ponder how we begin telling a new story about an ever-evolving city.

The project, organized by DiverseWorks Curator Ashley DeHoyos Sauder, was developed through a series of artist site visits, interviews, and workshops with Houstonians from the fall of 2022 through the summer of 2023. The interview transcriptions are the basis of a choreographic vocabulary utilized in the performance and installation. In the film, the perceptions of Houstonians as they correspond with their personal histories, cultures, and beliefs, are shared in a layered and interwoven narrative.

LANDS was commissioned by DiverseWorks beginning in 2020 as part of FUSED (French U.S. Exchange in Dance), a program of Villa Albertine and FACE Foundation in partnership with the French Embassy in the United States. Houston is the fourth city in Cottencin and Huynh’s portrait series following their first collaboration in New York in 2017. The project will travel to Paris as part of the Chaillot Experience weekend dedicated to the United States at the Théâtre National de Chaillot on December 9th, 2023.

DATES & TIMES
Tuesday, November 7 – Thursday, November 9, 2023
6:30 PM, Doors 6 PM

ADMISSION
Pay-what-you-wish. $25 suggested.
Reserve Tickets

LOCATION
MATCHBOX 2 @ MATCH
3400 Main Street, Houston, TX, 77002

View Event →
May
13
10:00 PM22:00

The BAYOU-TORIUM @ FINCA TRES ROBLES: SALSA DE MAYO

Click image for FB invite.

SALSA DE MAYO FESTIVAL,

Second Ward, Houston, 6000 Canal St. Htx 77011

SATURDAY, May 13, 10am – 2pm

The BioArt Bayou-torium will participate in the first “SALSA DE MAYO FESTIVAL” to celebrate the new grounds of the urban farm Finca Tres Robles. The Bayou-torium will have a display table with brochures, cards, videos, a microscope, stickers, drawings and cyanotype samples collected from the past three years of the project’s life. It will be a “show and tell” about the history and the different programs of the project in different locations at parks around the East End.

“We’re excited to bring this neighborhood-based, family-friendly event to the backyard of Houston’s East End! We invite our community to come out to the undeveloped grounds of their new Finca Tres Robles to sample the sweet tastes of the beginning of Houston’s fresh tomato season with a salsa and vegetable competition. Who knows, you could even be crowned the first Salsa de Mayo Champion with your stellar home crafted salsa!”


SATURDAY, May 13, 10am – 2pm, 6000 Canal St. Htx 77011

  Click on the banner image above for Finca Tres Robles website.

Entry is free and there is a $15/suggested donation for those who would like to support the mission of the farm.

Click on the banner images for FB invite.  

View Event →
May
6
8:30 PM20:30

BYOB @ Menil Collection

Saturday 8:30pm, May 6th, on the Menil Collection Lawn I projected some microscopic wonders. This performative projection is part of the annual series called “BYOB: Bring Your Own Beamer” sponsored by the Aurora Picture Show and hosted by the Menil Collection. I was first in the lineup of artists and I stoped at 9pm. See below for videos.

View Event →
Apr
22
9:00 AM09:00

Bayou-torium Microscope Workshop at 4th Annual S.T.E.A M. Expo in Uvalde, TX.

Bayou-torium Microscope Workshop at 4th Annual S.T.E.A M. Expo in Uvalde, TX.

On Sat Apr 22 2023, 9:00 am I created another BioArt Bayou-torium microscope workshop for the 4th Annual S.T.E.A.M. EXPO at El Progreso Memorial Library, 301 W Main St, in Uvalde, TX.

Many families and elementary school age children attended and participated. Everyone had a great time! The images and videos below give a good sense of the installation, but doesnt reveal the sheer amount of families that visited my room. Altogether, I must have printed approximately 83 print (one per child) that day! I had to stop short of 2pm because I ran out of printer ink. Thank you to my volunteers Heather, @lilbloody Ally and Jocelyn. Special thanks to the EXPO organizer Michael Robinson and especially the visionary Progresso Library Director, Mendell Morgan. Mendell is showing the world how a small town library becomes a place for community, learning and healing. Thank you Uvalde!

The 4th Annual S.T.E.A.M. Expo (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Mathematics Expo returned after three amazing events with a pause for the pandemic. For more info click the image above or here.

View Event →
Apr
1
10:00 AM10:00

Bio Art on the Bayou Vermilion presented by Artist, Henry G. Sanchez, of the BioArt Bayou-torium.

Bio Art on the Bayou Vermilion presented by Artist, Henry G. Sanchez, of the BioArt Bayou-torium. In keeping with the 8th Annual River Symposium's environmental education theme this year, BVPA is co-hosting a family education event. I will be giving a hands-on workshop providing participants with the opportunity to experience the bayou as a scientist and an artist. No Registration required!

This event is hosted by the 8th Annual River Symposium and the Acadiana Park and Nature Station.

For the Facebook Invite click on the image above or visit: https://www.facebook.com/events/3102449813381312

View Event →
Mar
31
8:00 AM08:00

Presentation at the Bayou Vermilion Preservation Association for the 8th Annual River Symposium

At the Bayou Vermilion Preservation Association’s 8th Annual River Symposium on March 31st in Lafayette, Louisiana I will be giving a presentation about the BioArt Bayou-torium with a microscope workshop.

This year's theme is “Enhancing our Watershed through Environmental Education.” Environmental education is invaluable in engaging the community in conserving, protecting and enjoying the Bayou Vermilion Watershed.

This one-day educational event will be held from 8 a.m. — 2 p.m. at the LITE Center Check-in and light breakfast at 7:30 AM. Lunch will be provided. Food by Joey's. Vegetarian options are available. Please email at BVPAconnect@gmail.com to reserve a vegetarian lunch. For presentations and a panel discussion to learn more about enhancing our watershed through environmental education:

Please Register to attend at: https://www.eventbrite.com/.../bvpas-8th-annual-river...
General Admission: $15
Student Admission: $5

View Event →
Nov
21
6:30 PM18:30

Visiting Lecture @ North Arizona University

I am happy to share that North Arizona University will host a lecture of Henry G. Sanchez as part of the SoA Visiting Lecture Series TODAY 6:25pm. (Both in-person and online).

Henry G. Sanchez is a project-based interdisciplinary and social practice artist. His work addresses social justice, the local environmental and the natural sciences which incorporate bio-art practices with digital media. Sanchez is the creator of three socially engaged projects: The BioArt Bayou-torium, (2018-present), a bilingual bio-art project that promotes stewardship of Houston’s Buffalo Bayou’s environment; L.O.C.C.A.: Law Office Center for Citizenship and Art, (2015-2022), an art and social justice platform that collaborates with artists and social justice groups in Houston about the latino/a/x experience; and the ENGLISH KILLS PROJECT,(2011-present), a Brooklyn, New York City based bio-art project proposing community-oriented bioremediation strategies at a Superfund site in Newtown Creek.

November 21, 2021 (Monday) 06:25pm to 8:00pm (Arizona). To watch a video of the lecture visit here: the Performing and Fine Arts Building (37A) Room 316  (in-person).

View Event →
Oct
1
to Oct 16

RETURN TO NATURE: THE 2022 BAYOU-TORIUM @ YBN NATURE PARK.

For the second consecutive year, the BioArt Bayou-torium returns to Yolanda Black Navarro Buffalo Bend Nature Park for the first three weekends of October (1-2, 8-9 and 15-16) in 2022. YBN Nature Park is located in the Second Ward at 2300 S. Sgt Macario Garcia Dr., 77011. More art and natural science related activities and nature guided tours are planned. Free and open to all ages. The Bayou-torium operates on Saturday and Sunday from 9am - 3pm.

I am honored to be named the Inaugural Artist-in-Residence to the Buffalo Bayou Partnership. My thanks to Anne Olsen, President; Karen Farber, Vice President for External Affairs; Trudi Smith Director of Programming; the BBP Board of Directors; and the entire Staff of the Buffalo Bayou Partnership for their generous support. Additional thanks to Adrian Garcia, Harris County Commissioner and the Precinct 2 Parks and Recreation Department and staff.

View Event →
May
10
to May 28

Ancestral Echoes: A Decade of Bio Art, opening May 19, 6-8pm

School of Visual Arts (SVA) presents “Ancestral Echoes: A Decade of Bio Art,” an exhibition of work by BFA Fine Arts students, alumni and visiting artists, curated by department chair Suzanne Anker and alumna and Bio Art Laboratory Manager Tarah Rhoda. The exhibition will be on view Tuesday, May 10, through Saturday, May 28, at the SVA Gramercy Gallery, 209 East 23rd Street, New York City.

 “Ancestral Echoes: A Decade of Bio Art” is a ten-year survey of artworks commemorating the inauguration of SVA’s Bio Art Laboratory, one of the first of its kind in a Fine Arts Department in the United States. In this unique laboratory artists work with the tools of science to make art. Ranging from faux leather made from bacteria to microscopic images revealing the unseen, issues concerning climate change and sustainability are the focus of this practice. This exhibition brings together the work of current students, alumni and visiting artists engaged with these processes and concepts. Drawing on both experimental media and new technologies, artists since the 1980’s have turned their attention to working with biologically related concepts and materials. Whereas traditional art practices turn their attention to aesthetic attributes of color, line and form, Bio Art expands such considerations to engage with the philosophical concerns of altering nature, both environmentally and in scientific laboratories.

 “Myotomato”, a group project produced by SVA students and its consultants in 2016, for the competition Bio Design Challenge, created a speculative protein rich tomato which could deliver nutrients to humans without the need for consuming meat. This project, presented at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, received an award and has traveled to numerous exhibition sites. Other work in the exhibition includes an array of work by the pioneers of Bio Art including Oron Catts and Ionat Zurr, Paul Vanouse and Jennifer Willet among others. Alumni include Steph Mantis, who appears in a commercial for B&H Photo, and Carolyn Angleton who has gone on to be a speaker at many international conferences. Current students include Nick Delcastillo who has developed a technique for organic taxidermy, Chong Xu whose work combines the integration of biology with technology, and Sining Zhu who presents a fragile suit laden with human cells as they disappear from existence.

 Participating Artists:

Carolyn Angleton, Suzanne Anker, Caro Arevalo, Reid Arowood, Heather Barnett, Clare Benson, Oron Catts & Ionat Zurr, Crystal Wai Man Chan, Nicole Condon-Shih, Tori Deetz, Nick Delcastillo, Heather Dewey-Hagborg, Scarlet Ding, Emma Fasciolo, Hannah Fitzgerald, Pablo Garcia Lopez, Heide Hatry, Kathy High, Rae Hsu, Yihe Huang, Priscilla Jeong, Lea Kannar-Lichtenberger, Francois-Joseph Lapointe, Shirley Li, Jessica Maffia, Steph Mantis, Sabrina Merayo Nunez, Tarah Rhoda, Joana Ricou, Henry Sanchez, Kun Kyung Sok, Ernesto Solana, Orkan Telhan, Paul Vanouse, Natalie Waldburger, Darya Warner, Jennifer Willet, Chong Xu, Grace Zhang, and Sining Zhu among others.

 

Suzanne Anker is a Bio Art pioneer, visual artist and theorist working at the intersection of art and the biological sciences. Her practice investigates the ways in which nature is being altered in the 21st century. Her work has been shown at the Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY; Daejeon Biennale, Korea; Chronus Art Center, Shanghai, China; Parrish Art Museum, Southampton, NY; ZKM, Karlsruhe, Germany; Today Art Museum, Beijing, China; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN; the Smithsonian Institute, Washington, D.C.; the Phillips Collection, Washington, DC; P.S.1 Museum, New York, NY; J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA; the Berliner Medizinhistorisches Museum der Charité, Berlin, Germany; the Center for Cultural Inquiry, Berlin, Germany; the Pera Museum, Istanbul, Turkey; the Museum of Modern Art, Kyoto, Japan; and the International Biennial of Contemporary Art of Cartagena de Indias, Colombia. Her books include The Molecular Gaze: Art in the Genetic Age, co-authored with the late sociologist Dorothy Nelkin, published in 2004 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Chairing SVA’s Fine Arts Department in NYC since 2005, Ms. Anker continues to interweave traditional and experimental media in her department’s Bio Art Laboratory.

 Tarah Rhoda is an artist and educator based in NYC, where she runs the School of Visual Arts’ Bio Art Lab, a BSL-1 laboratory that provides artists with the tools of biotechnology and fosters creative applications. Her recent art practice explores the physical principle of wetness as a metaphor for empathy, social permeability and the challenge of recognizing our fluid selves blurring at the edges. She received her BFA (2010) and MFA (2020) from SVA and also studied at the Gerrit Rietveld Academie in Amsterdam. Her work has recently been exhibited in New York, Denver, Detroit, Toronto, Mexico City, Lisbon, Berlin, Amsterdam, Eindhoven and featured in National Geographic, the Guardian, and CBSNews.

 The SVA Gramercy Gallery is open Monday through Saturday, 10:00am–6:00pm. In accordance with SVA COVID-19 protocols, in-person viewing is open to SVA students, faculty and staff. The public may visit by showing proof of full vaccination (including booster, if eligible) and photo ID. All visitors to the Gramercy Gallery must pre-register through an RSVP link no less than 48 hours prior to the selected event date and time. Proper masking is required.

View Event →
Oct
2
to Oct 17

BioArt Bayou-torium returns to YBN-Nature Park!

The BioArt Bayou-torium returns the month of October, 2021 at Yolanda Black Navarro Nature Park on 2300 Sgt. Macario Garcia Dr. @ the 69th street bridge at Buffalo Bayou in Houston’s East End!

Final BACK BaB YBN.jpg

The BioArt Bayou-torium operates for three weekends in October (2-3, 9-10, 16-17) from 9am-3pm for outdoor activities: natural science and nature tours; draw and sketch landscape and wildlife; plant hunting maps, and more. The BioArt Bayou-torium is a free in-person, outdoor program, open to all ages! Parking on site is free. Portable toilets are available. Mask requirements for nature tours. All programs are outdoors. Standard Covid protocols observed.

FRONT-BaB-YBN.jpg

Click on the image below for the schedule of art activities and nature tours. Updates are ongoing.

Logos.jpg
View Event →
Sep
25
4:00 PM16:00

BioArt Bayou-torium returns to YBN-Nature Park!

The BioArt Bayou-torium returns this September 25th, 2021 at Yolanda Black Navarro Nature Park on 2300 Sgt. Macario Garcia Dr. @ the 69th street bridge at Buffalo Bayou in Houston’s East End!

The Buffalo Bayou Partnership presents this rare night-time opening event program from 4pm-9pm teams up the Bayou-torium with Brandon Ballengee’s “Bugstock”. It will be a evening with two bio-art projects presenting family-friendly, natural science activities. Free and open to all ages!

https://buffalobayou.org/event/bioart-bayou-torium/2021-09-25/

The BioArt Bayou-torium remains in operation for three weekends in October (2-3, 9-10, 16-17) from 9am-3pm for outdoor art, science and nature tours with landscape and wildlife drawing programs. The BioArt Bayou-torium is a free in-person, outdoor program, open to all ages! Parking on site is free. Portable toilets are available. Mask requirements for nature tours. All programs are outdoors. Standard Covid protocols observed.

Final BACK BaB YBN.jpg

Schedule of art of art activities and nature tours coming soon!

Logos.jpg

This years BioArt Bayou-torium programing is sponsored by the City of Houston’s Houston Arts Alliance; Harris County Pct. 2 Commissioner Adrian Garcia; and the Buffalo Bayou Partnership.

View Event →
Sep
24
7:00 PM19:00

September 20, 2019 “Does New Social Art Need Political Theory?” @ Rudyard's, Tues., Sept. 24, 7-8pm

Screen Shot 2021-03-30 at 8.05.29 PM.png

Dear Friends,

You are invited to the first public presentation of a philosophical proposition I’ve been professing for some time. This coming Tuesday night at Rudyard’s, I ask the question: Can new political legal theories that propose an expansion of human rights which recognize the “internal rights” of all humans, point a way towards understanding and developing social practice art or socially engaged art projects? Please join me at Rudyard’s September 24th at 7pm. Plenty of conversations and spirits to share!

Philosophically Drinking

Tuesday, September 24, 2019 at 7 PM – 8 PM

@ Rudyard's, 2010 Waugh Dr, Houston, Texas 77006

View Event →