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  1. Songs of Light and Hope: A Hanukkah Concert

    Durga D. Agrawal FamilyJerold B. Katz FoundationJoan and Stanford Alexander FamilyNancy Pollok GuineeJoy and Benjamin WarrenLevant FoundationBettie CartwrightAnne Lamkin KinderMr. and Mrs. Rodney H. MargolisMilton D. Ellen R. Gritz The Ruth K. Shartle Lecture Series is made possible by a generous grant from The Brown Foundation, Inc. All Learning and Interpretation programs at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, receive generous support from H-E-B; Institute of Museum and Library Services; Sempra Foundation; the Brown Foundation, Inc.; the Houston Livestock

  2. Contemplating the Divine: Buddhism

    Durga D. Agrawal FamilyJerold B. Katz FoundationJoan and Stanford Alexander FamilyNancy Pollok GuineeJoy and Benjamin WarrenLevant FoundationBettie CartwrightAnne Lamkin KinderMr. and Mrs. Rodney H. MargolisMilton D. Ellen R. Gritz The Ruth K. Shartle Lecture Series is made possible by a generous grant from The Brown Foundation, Inc. All Learning and Interpretation programs at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, receive generous support from H-E-B; Institute of Museum and Library Services; Sempra Foundation; the Brown Foundation, Inc.; the Houston Livestock

  3. Afruz Amighi: Abodes of Solace

    Durga D. Agrawal FamilyJerold B. Katz FoundationJoan and Stanford Alexander FamilyNancy Pollok GuineeJoy and Benjamin WarrenLevant FoundationBettie CartwrightAnne Lamkin KinderMr. and Mrs. Rodney H. MargolisMilton D. Ellen R. Gritz The Ruth K. Shartle Lecture Series is made possible by a generous grant from The Brown Foundation, Inc. All Learning and Interpretation programs at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, receive generous support from H-E-B; Institute of Museum and Library Services; Sempra Foundation; the Brown Foundation, Inc.; the Houston Livestock

  4. The Protestant Reformation through Bach’s Music

    Durga D. Agrawal FamilyJerold B. Katz FoundationJoan and Stanford Alexander FamilyNancy Pollok GuineeJoy and Benjamin WarrenLevant FoundationBettie CartwrightAnne Lamkin KinderMr. and Mrs. Rodney H. MargolisMilton D. Ellen R. Gritz The Ruth K. Shartle Lecture Series is made possible by a generous grant from The Brown Foundation, Inc. All Learning and Interpretation programs at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, receive generous support from H-E-B; Institute of Museum and Library Services; Sempra Foundation; the Brown Foundation, Inc.; the Houston Livestock

  5. History Book Club “A Perfect Red: Empire, Espionage, and the Quest for the Color of Desire”

    7 p.m. Bobbie Nau; William A. and Madeline Welder Smith Foundation; and additional generous donors. This book traces the history of cochineal, a highly coveted source of red dye, and its place in centuries of intrigue as global powers pursued the secrets to producing the most desired color on earth. Via Zoom | 1:30 p.m. or

  6. Bambi

    Introduced by author Karen Fang, a member of the MFAH film subcommittee In the heart of the forest, Bambi takes his first wobbly steps and sets out to explore his new world with his friends: the lovable rabbit Thumper and a bashful Guided by the wise Friend Owl, Bambi also learns valuable lessons about love, loss, and life.  Parking Information | Museum Hours | MFAH Campus Map After the screening, Karen Fang has signed copies of her book Background Artist: The Life and Work of Tyrus Wong available for purchase.

  7. Dory Previn: On My Way to Where

    A former model and chorus girl, Dory Previn gained fame as a lyricist for films such as The Valley of the Dolls and The Sterile Cuckoo. Preceded by a cover performance of Dory Previn's music by director/singer-songwriter Julia Greenberg and singer-songwriter Gretchen Phillips Performance at 1:30 p.m. / Film Screening at 2:15 p.m. This life-altering situation ignited a radical act of self-love and acceptance from Dory Previn: Starting with her 1970 autobiographical album On My Way to Where, she reinvented herself as a singer-songwriter in a series of introspective

  8. I'm Not Everything I Want to Be (Jeste nejsem, kým chci být)

    In the last decades of the Soviet Union, a young, queer female photographer breaks free from the constraints of the repressive Czechoslovakian regime and embraces the underground hedonism of the times on a wild journey to freedom Not Everything I Want to Be captures her experiences through thousands of subjective photographs. Truly a life lived in pictures. Order Tickets on Houston Cinema Arts Festival Website Plan Your Visit This screening takes place in Brown Auditorium Theater on the lower level of the Law Building.

  9. Bird

    Twelve-year-old Bailey (newcomer Nykiya Adams) lives with her single father, Bug (a tattooed Barry Keoghan), and brother Hunter (Jason Buda) in a squat in North Kent. Writer-director Andrea Arnold returns to the gritty social realism of Fish Tank and the Oscar-winning Wasp, but as always, the British auteur subverts expectations—here taking flight with a fantastical tale of transformation. Leaving the graffiti-covered walls of the squat, she meets Bird (Franz Rogowski), an eccentric dreamer who dares Bailey to spread her wings. Bird is a striking coming-of-age tale that hides its magic in plain sight.

  10. Basquiat in B/W

    A touchstone of ‘90s independent cinema, announcing the arrival of a great talent (Jeffrey Wright in his first starring role), Basquiat remains a benchmark for biopics and an illuminating portrait of the artist and his creative Featuring a veritable gallery of film icons: Dennis Hopper, Gary Oldman, Benicio del Toro, Parker Posey, Christopher Walken, Willem Dafoe, and David Bowie as Andy Warhol. From visual artist and filmmaker Julian Schnabel comes an evocative personal rendering of artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, told in a series of vignettes tracing his turn from street kid graffiti artist to one of the most influential