Here’s what to expect from Fort Worth’s art scene in the first half of 2024
January 03, 2024 08:59 AM
In 2024, we can expect dinner table arguments about elections,
the latest uproar about social issues and plenty of local arts and
culture happenings from January to June (and in one case July).They include another year of risk taking, balancing those risks with mainstays and old quirky favorites. Let’s take a look at what’s happening in the first half of the year. Events, festivals and talks
Fort Worth in many ways a city of festivals, with art, music and performing events year round. And our museums and universities add to our intellectual life with talks, symposia and as venues for festivals.
Here are some of those to check out.
▪ The National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum,
having dodged closure, holds an open house at its new location at
2201 Dottie Lynn Parkway, Suite 115 takes place on 5:30-8 p.m.
on Jan. 10.
▪ The American Institute of Architects Fort Worth begins
another year of building tours on Jan. 18 at Discovery Studio Tour
at Wings of Hope in Cleburne. Their honor awards ceremony
takes place at 10:30 a.m. on Feb. 17 at The Modern. Tickets are
free for members and $25 for non-members. More information at
AIAFW.org.▪ The annual Django Reinhardt Festival, a delightful and
quirky three-day music festival celebrating the music of the late
Jean Baptiste “Django” Reinhardt with movies, concerts and food,
takes place Jan. 26-28 at Arts Fifth Avenue.
▪ The Fort Worth African American Roots Music Festival
takes place from noon-10 p.m. March 16 at the Southside
Preservation Hall and Rose Chapel featuring headliners Lizzie No
and Jerron Paxton.
▪ On April 1, is the biennial TCU Texas Book Award, given to
the author of the best book about Texas. Previous award winners
include Julia Sweig and Rick Bass.
▪ Nishi Fest, a seasonal celebration of anime, gaming, and Asian
pop culture in North Texas, takes place April 20- 22 at the Will
Rogers Memorial Center.
▪ In the Near Southside, the annual pedestrian-only event Open
Streets shuts down Magnolia Avenue and turns it into a
pedestrian-only space on April 13.
▪ The next week, the annual Main Street Arts Festival takes
place April 18-21 downtown. While not scheduled yet, the smallerFort Worth Art Fair featuring local artists and galleries takes place
simultaneously.
▪ The fifth annual Fort Worth Tattoo Arts Festival runs June
7-9 at the Fort Worth Convention Center.
▪ The Mimir Chamber Music Festival presents its 27th season
from July 1-12 at the TCU School of Music and the Kimbell’s
Renzo Piano Pavilion. This year includes leaders of the Chicago
Symphony, Houston Symphony and The Cleveland Orchestra
joined by the renowned Horszowski Trio.
Visual arts
Another year of gallery changes has not stopped people from
opening new venues and taking on risky programming.
College galleries, including at TCU, Texas Wesleyan, UT Arlington
and Tarrant County College, feature works by graduating
undergraduates and graduate students.
▪ The Galleries at UTA present Benito Huerta / Chaffee +
Huerta Collaborative from Jan. 20-March 30. The two-person
show with retired gallery director Huerta and local artist Janet
Chaffee, who uses natural elements as well as paint.▪ At the Kimbell Art Museum, “Bonnard’s World’s” about
Pierre Bonnard was a painter, illustrator and printmaker,
influential mover in the Post-Impressionist movement, runs
through Jan. 28. For fans of war, fabrics or history, the go-to show
will likely be “Art and War in the Renaissance: The Battle
of Pavia Tapestries,” which runs June 16–Sept. 15. Their
Friday Evening lectures continue and the hit Artist’s Eye series
continues features local artist Nic Nicosia from 11 a.m. to noon
Feb. 17.
▪ The retrospective of Native American artist Jaune Quick-to-
See Smith closes on Jan. 21 at the Modern Art Museum of Fort
Worth. Then “Surrealism and Us: Caribbean and African
Diasporic Artists since 1940” runs March 10-July 28.
Inspired by the history of Surrealism in the Caribbean with
connections to the United States, it presents over 50 works from
the 1940s to the present day, including painting, sculpture,
drawing, video and installation.
▪ Running through April 24 at the Sid Richardson Museum is
“Charles M. Russell: Storyteller Across Media,”
showcasing the artist’s fascination with storytelling.
▪ Running from Jan. 25-Feb. 22 at Tarrant County College’s South
Campus’s Carillon Gallery, undoubtedly one of the best in the city,is “Pavlina Vagioni: Gorgon.” The Greek multimedia artist
based in Athens and Houston reconsiders and rethinks Greek
myths.
▪ Despite uncertainty surrounding its future, Arts Fort Worth
continues to present a diverse array of programming. It begins the
year with open studio spaces for artists at 1 p.m. Jan. 6.
▪ “Soy de Tejas,” an exhibition showcasing 40 contemporary Texas
artists of Latin American around themes such as identity,
mythology and modern political themes from March 29-June 22.
It’s curated by Rigoberto Luna and comes Centro de Artes in San
Antonio.
▪ At Artspace 111 (111 Hampton), check out two shows: “BANG
BANG: A Show About Texas,” a solo show of work by self-taught
artist Tyler Casey, who is inspired by pop culture and history,
from Feb. 8-March 16, and a show of Layla Luna’s haunting,
emotional paintings runs from June 6-July 27.
▪ Running Jan. 13-Feb. 29 at Bale Creek Gallery (120 St. Louis
Ave. Unit 149) is “Hell’s Half Acre,” a solo show of Bruce Lee
Webb. The Waxahachie artists runs Webb Gallery with his wife
Julie. Perhaps one of the best galleries just outside of the
Metroplex features outsider and self-taught artists.▪ J. Peeler Howell Fine Art (3521 Locke Ave.) continues the theme
of the previous group show “Sonder” with “Sonder 2.0,”
another reflection of life’s complexities and people’s complete
unawareness. It runs through March 16. Opening in March is the
group exhibition Vernal, featuring new and familiar artists
exploring ideas of light and illumination. He continues his series
of public talks with one about defending the humanities from
6-7:30 p.m. Jan. 25 and artist Brenda Chiardiello tentatively
scheduled from 6-7:30 p.m. on Feb. 15.
▪ “2023 Wrapped: Celebrating A Year of Art” remains on
display at William Campbell Contemporary’s Foch Street location
(217 Foch St.) through Jan. 13. Running at the same location from
Jan. 27-March 9 is the two-person Luther Smith + Beverly Penn:
Symbiosis: “Nature Revealed.” Smith, a retired TCU professor
of photography who looks at nature and the built environment,
displays alongside Penn, a sculptor who modifies and interrogates
the environment. An exhibit of works by the late Woodrow
Blagg of the well-known family of artists runs Jan. 11-27 at the
original location (4935 Byers Ave.).
▪ The Fort Worth Art Dealers Association’s Spring Gallery
Night takes place once again at venues across the county on
March 30, with the above venue showing as well as Gallery 440
(440 S. Main St.), which presents “Affirmations” curated by ArielDavis and featuring artists from the Fort Worth Art Collective.
Artist Red Milk Crone displays at The Pool Near Southside (1801
8th Ave.) beginning March 23. More details to come.
▪ Among the shows running at the Fort Worth Botanic
Garden are 21 sculptures by the late Seward Johnson running
March 1-Sept. 1. Expect surprises as you encounter sculptures that
fool the eye and beg for double takes.
▪ And don’t forget the ongoing visual arts events is second Friday
of each month when Sinaca Studios hosts a guest artist for an
open studio night.
▪ Watch out for shows at some of the city’s other galleries and
cultural centers, including 400H, the Amon Carter Museum of
American Art, Arlington Museum of Art, Artes de la Rosa, Blind
Alley Projects, Caravan of Dreams, Easyside, Fort Works Art and
Kinfolk House.
Live theater
In the theater, some companies celebrate anniversaries with
premieres, mainstays and special programming.
▪ The Stolen Shakespeare Guild’s festival returns Feb. 23-
March 10 with rotating performances of the classics “Romeo andJuliet” and “Much Ado About Nothing” in the Sanders Theater at
the Fort Worth Community Arts Center.
▪ Casa Manana presents “Once,” the award-winning musical
about an unexpected friendship that evolves into a powerful and
complicated love story from March 2-10. In the Reid Cabaret
Theatre, check out “The Music of Elton John” from June
11-22, featuring appearances by some of Broadway’s top stars
belting out the singer’s top hits.
▪ Stage West presents “POTUS: Or, Behind Every Great
Dumbass Are Seven Women Trying to Keep Him Alive” by Selina
Fillinger, about the seven women who keep an unruly president
under control, from March 2-24. It is followed by “Sherlock
Holmes and the Adventure of the Elusive Ear” by David
MacGregor, a Sherlock Holmes mystery with a zany twist, which
runs from June 6-23. It hosts “The Art of Burlesque: History and
Some Hands On!” with Ms. Red Snapper from 6-7:30 p.m. on
April 2.
▪ Circle Theatre’s season begins with the regional premiere of
Lauren Gunderson’s “Artemisia,” about the 17th century painter
Artemisia Gentileschi, whose “Judith and Holofernes” displayed
at the Kimbell in 2020, and runs Feb. 1-24. Taylor Staniforth
directs. Running from March 21-April 13 is the regional premiereof the Pulitzer Prize-winning “Water by the Spoonful,” described
as a heartfelt meditation on lives on the brink of redemption.
Alexandra Hernandez directs.
▪ Amphibian Stage Productionscelebrates its 25th
anniversary with “Instructions for a Séance,” an experimental
theater piece by Katie Bender and inspired by Harry Houdini,
running Feb. 2-11. Lily Wolff directs. Running April 5-28 is
George Brant’s musical “Marie and Rosetta,” about influential
rock and roll musicians Sister Rosetta Tharpe and Marie Knight.
A director and music director have not been announced.
“SparkFest,” the annual performing arts festival returns June
13-26. It also continues its National Theatre Live series at the
Modern.
▪ Jubilee Theater continues its packed season with Donald
McNeilly and Frank Cullen’s “Bread ‘n’ Gravy,” the songs and life
about famed Black singer and actress Ethel Waters, which runs
Feb. 2 to March 3. D. Wambui Richardson directs. Richardson
also directs Keenan Scott’s “Thoughts of a Colored Man,” about
seven unnamed Black men in Brooklyn who viewers only know
through distinct traits. It runs May 31-June 30.
▪ Theatre Arlington’s season begins with the red hot musical
“Cabaret,” about survival in a Berlin nightclub as the Third Reichcomes to power, from Feb. 9-March 3. Douglas Lyon’s “Chicken
and Biscuits,” a comedy directed by Sheran Goodspeed Keyton,
follows a family trying to bury their father only to find out a dark
secret. It runs June 7-23.
▪ Performing Arts Fort Worth’s Broadway at the Bass and
BNSF Popular Entertainment seasons include the new musical
Disney’s “Aladdin,” running from Jan. 31-Feb 4 and the hit
musical “Hamilton” June 11-23. Popular entertainment artists
include Robert Earl Keen on Jan. 13 and the The One O’Clock Lab
Band on May 3.
▪ At Dickies Arena is the hit group Cirque de Soleil, presenting
“Cirque de Soleil Crystal,” fusing ice skating with their definitive
acrobatics, visits Dickies Arena from Feb. 15-Feb. 18. Tickets can
be purchased through Ticketmaster.
Cliburn, Fort Worth Opera, FW Symphony, Texas
Ballet
The Big Four (The Cliburn, Fort Worth Opera, Fort Worth
Symphony and Texas Ballet Theater) close out their seasons, and
don’t just perform anymore at Bass Hall.
▪ Driving the opera’s season are shows such as “dwb (driving
while black),” directed by rising star Ayvaunn Penn about amother who watches her “beautiful brown boy” face the realities
of modern life as a Black person in the United States. It runs Feb.
16-17 at 7:30 p.m. at the Van Cliburn Recital Hall at TCU and Feb.
24 at 2 p.m. at the Kimbell. The opera returns to Bass Hall with
the classic “La Bohème.” It runs April 5 at 7:30 p.m. and April 7 ay
2 p.m.
▪ The Fort Worth Symphony’s season includes acclaimed opera
singer Renée Fleming and leading baritone Rod Gilfry belting out
some of Broadway’s favorite songs at 7 p.m. Feb. 17, the
immersive “Lasting Impressions” at 7:30 p.m. May 11 at the Will
Rogers Auditorium and concludes with a brass instrument concert
with a premiere concerto by Kevin Day and Pulitzer Prize-winning
composer Jennifer Higdon.
▪ The Cliburn continues its Cliburn Sessions at The Post at River
East and the Cliburn at the Kimbell series at the Piano Pavilion.
Stanislav Ioudenitch, the 2001 winner, and daughter Maria
perform at the Post at 8 p.m. Jan. 31 and the Kimbell at 7:30 p.m.
Feb. 1. Soloist Gabriel Montero performs at 7:30 p.m. April 25 at
the Kimbell and at 8 p.m. April 26 at the Post.
▪ TBT stages “Brilliants,” a mixed repertoire production with
four shorter works, which runs Feb. 23-25 at Bass Hall andBeauty and the Beast, the tale as old as time choreographed by
Lew Christensen, which runs May 17-19.
Music and dance companies
▪ From Feb. 17-18, Ballet Fronier of Texas stages the timeless
“Romeo & Juliet,” set to Sergei Prokofiev and with a new take by
Artistic Director Chung Lin Tseng. Taking place April 20-21 is
Director’s Choice, featuring “Carnival of the Animals” and Tseng’s
other choices. Concerts at I.M. Terrell Academy.
▪ TheChamber Music Society of Fort Worth presents
“Curtis on Tour,” featuring students from the Curtis Institute of
Music and violinist Ben Beilan on Feb. 24. Hungarian pianist
Dénes Várjon makes his debut on May 4. Concerts begin at 2 p.m.
with a pre-concert discussion at 1:15 p.m. at The Modern.
▪ Ballet Concerto gets people outside for its 42nd year of summer
performances at 8:30 p.m. June 20-23 at The Shops at Clearfork
in Fort Worth, featuring choreography by Spanish dance master
Luis Montero will present work choreographed in the Spanish
idiom and resident choreographer Elise Lavallee. Lawn seats are
free but seats and package deals can be reserved at
Balletconcerto.com.▪ The Allegro Guitar Society brings in internationally
renowned Korean guitarist Bokyung Byun at 2:30 p.m. Jan. 7.
Manuel Barrueco, one of the most important guitarists in the
world, performs at 2:30 p.m. April 7. All concerts are at the Piano
Pavilion at Kimbell.
▪ Fort Worth Chorale and Voices of Fort Worthperform
“The Inventors,” with composer Jocelyn Hagen’s The Notebooks
of Leonardo da Vinci with an immersive multimedia presentation
at 3:30 p.m. April 14 at I.M. Terrell. .
▪ Wrapping up our list is a concert by the new Ensemble Iona
with selections by National Medal of Arts winner Morten
Lauridsen and British up and comer Jonathan Dove at 7 p.m. Feb.
24 at St. Stephen’s Presbyterian Church. The concert is free but a
$25 donation is suggested.