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  1. A Mother's Day Tour

    May 8, 2012 - The motif's appeal still rings true today, as it captures a moment of unparalleled significance in the cycle of life. Click here to download a handy self-guided tour. Since ancient times, the image of mother and child has appeared in art around the world.

  2. Beatriz González: A Retrospective

    Beatriz González: A Retrospective travels to the MFAH following the April 2019 premiere at the Pérez Art Museum Miami.  Información en español sobre la exposición Beatriz González: A Retrospective is the first large-scale U.S. exhibition dedicated to the work of Colombian artist Beatriz González.  Beatriz González: A Retrospective | October 27, 2019–January 20, 2020  PublicationThe illustrated exhibition catalogue is available through the MFA Shop (713.639.7360) and the Museum’s Hirsch Library (713.639.7325).

  3. Degas: A New Vision

    Degas: A New Vision | 2016–2017  Información en español sobre la exposición “Simply a must-see exhibition if you want to understand Degas . . . Literally a once-in-a-lifetime experience.” This exhibition is made possible in part by a grant from the Texas Commission on the Arts.  Degas: A New Vision benefits from that scholarship, puts Degas back together again, and offers an opportunity to see the artist anew.

  4. Mark Rothko: A Retrospective

    Long recognized as among the foremost figures of the Abstract Expressionist vanguard, Mark Rothko embraced the possibility of beauty in pure abstraction with a painterly eloquence that gave a new voice to American art. Across a career spanning the most troubled years of the 20th century, Rothko (1903–1970) explored the tragic and the sublime, and his canvases remain a testament to the deep humanism he brought to modern painting. The MFAH is the sole U.S. venue to present Mark Rothko: A Retrospective, which draws upon the unrivaled holdings of the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.

  5. Georges Braque: A Retrospective

    See the Work of Two Great Modernists in Houston While Georges Braque: A Retrospective is on view, the Menil Collection presents a pair of exhibitions devoted to the work of renowned Surrealist artist René Magritte (1898– The MFAH is the only U.S. venue for Georges Braque: A Retrospective, which premiered at the Grand Palais in Paris and has been organized to mark the 50th anniversary of the French artist’s death.

  6. A Colorfully Bazaar Collaboration

    Sep 22, 2020 - The areas that receive the wax printing act as a stop-out, which allows the dye to print around the carved designs and create beautiful, one-of-a-kind pieces. She was a loving, kind, and giving human being.” Special TechniquesFahari Bazaar clothing is designed with comfort, function, and style in mind. The Batiki fabric is created using a block-printing technique wherein the designers carve designs into foam blocks, dip the blocks in wax, and press them onto the fabrics.

  7. A World-Famous Rediscovery

    Mar 30, 2020 - A French art dealer, Philippe Mendes, had notified MFAH Director Gary Tinterow that a long-lost painting by revered 19th-century Romantic artist Eugène Delacroix had surfaced from a Parisian apartment.  Last summer, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, became part of the much-discussed story surrounding a startling discovery in Paris. After a year of directing the research to authenticate and conserve the painting, Mendes was offering it for purchase.

  8. A Cinematic Look at Mexican History: Chatting with “Tales of Mexico” Producer Luis Salinas

    Sep 11, 2017 - We were presented a script while working on another project. María Diego Hernández, whom we knew as the sister of a sound technician we worked with, had written a script that had already won several awards. Luis Salinas, a Houstonian who produced the film and joins us in person for the screenings on September 15 & 17, chatted with me about the expansive narrative. Tales of Mexico is such a unique project. What was your role as a producer of Tales of Mexico? In this case, my role was more expansive than usual.

  9. Caricaturing a Caricaturist: Thomas Nast Today

    Aug 15, 2017 - bag of money for a head. When you were caricaturing a photo of Thomas Nast for the Funny Faces online exhibition, was one visual element more difficult to exaggerate than another? It can be hard to relate to the humor of satirical prints that are more than a century old! Are there aspects of Nast’s work that you still find funny and relevant?

  10. A Confessional Sculpture by Louise Bourgeois

    Mar 15, 2017 - Convinced that she could not conceive a child, they returned briefly to France to adopt a French boy, Michel. Within a year, in 1940, she had given birth to another son, Jean-Louis, and in 1941 another, Alain. Although she never specifically commented on the title, Quarantania I is a reference to the word “quarantine,” or a recovery from an illness with 40 days spent alone away from other people. Bourgeois was born in France, where her parents ran a tapestry-restoration business.