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Art in the City

Fort Worth museum picks 6 new artists to perk up billboards near downtown

Stephanie Allmon Merry
Apr 1, 2020 | 10:46 am

The doors to the Modern may be locked to the public right now, but the Fort Worth museum is still bringing art into the community. A new season of the public program Modern Billings will feature the work of six artists on billboards in under-served communities on the outskirts of downtown.

"By featuring works from a variety of artists along Jacksboro Highway and the Lancaster corridor in Fort Worth, Modern Billings extends the reach of the Modern and the education department into new communities," the museum says in a release. "The large-scale installations provide an intervention opportunity for contemporary art in urban landscapes while offering a public exhibition platform for under-recognized artists."

Assistant curators of education Jesse Morgan Barnett and Tiffany Wolf Smith work with emerging and student artists to put their imagery and text onto billboards from Clear Channel Outdoor. The billboards might otherwise be used to present commercial advertisements rather than cultural curiosities, they say.

The billboard format also, they point out, allows artwork to be viewed in isolation, out car windows, or from computer monitors.

"This Modern Billings iteration comes at a precarious time for artists and students, especially those having their final graduate exhibitions cancelled or postponed," the release says. "With normal operations temporarily upended due to COVID-19, nearly all of these participating artists have graduate thesis exhibitions affected."

These are the new locations and participating artists, with descriptions provided by the museum:

2130 Jacksboro Hwy. (76164)
Karley Adrion is a designer based in Fort Worth. She earned her BS in Advertising/Public Relations from Abilene Christian University and is currently pursuing an MFA in Visual Communication Design from the University of Texas at Arlington. Her graduate work explores themes of community and communication, specifically examining areas in which engagement and understanding can be improved among various groups of people.

6602 Lancaster Ave. (76112)
Nathalie Alfonso was born in Bogotá, Colombia, holds a BFA from Florida International University, and is currently pursuing an MFA at Southern Methodist University. Alfonso has exhibited and performed her work in galleries, universities, and public spaces such as Sweet Pass Sculpture Park, Site131, and Liliana Bloch Gallery, Dallas; Marymount University, Washington, DC; Spinello Projects and The Annex, Fordistas, Miami; Art and Culture Center of Hollywood, Florida; Miami Beach Urban Studios and Miami Beach Botanical Gardens; The Projects in FATVillage, Fort Lauderdale; and La Factoría, Guayaquil, Ecuador. She has curated and exhibited in Miami and Fort Lauderdale for the past four years. Her work investigates the value of manual labor, the degeneration of the body, and notions of impermanence through drawing, installation, and video.

3800 E. Lancaster Ave. (76103)
Chris Wright Evans is an artist interested in the ways people relate to objects and place, and how we generate reality through photography. After graduating from St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas, Evans moved to New York City, where he lived and worked until 2017, printing for the photographer Joel Meyerowitz and retouching for Droga5 and Urban Print & Motion. In 2014, Evans was selected as a finalist and alternate for the Fulbright Award, and in 2016 a portfolio of his work received honorable mention from juror Mickalene Thomas at Baxter St at the Camera Club of New York. His photographs have been exhibited across the United States and have been featured in print and online. In 2018 and 2019, he was a finalist for the Contemporary Art Dealers of Dallas Project Fund. In the spring of 2020, Evans will receive his MFA from the University of North Texas.

5426 Jacksboro Hwy. (76114)
Sierra Forester is an artist who grew up in northern California and is now living and working in Texas. In her work, she emphasizes the immediate environment through found materials and installation. Forester works through observing, questioning, and attempting to understand what cannot be understood. Through autonomic gestures, her aim is to grasp and visualize our existence and the constructs we build around us, however lofty that may be. Frequent topics in Forester's work include the social frameworks we use to navigate our relationship with the world as well as our perception of time. Minimal in form, her work remains open-ended and porous with hopes of allowing a multitude of perceptions to be drawn.

6890 Lancaster Ave. (76112)
Philip Martin, born in Irving, is a oscillating interdisciplinary artist living and working in North Texas. Martin earned his BFA from the University of North Texas in 2004 and is currently pursuing an MFA in Art, Technology, and Emerging Communication at the University of Texas at Dallas.

5300 Jacksboro Hwy. (76114)
Katie H. Ritchie is a teaching artist living in Commerce, Texas. Her work explores corn and its reach into our lives beyond the supermarket while questioning the targeted demographics of the political plant. Ritchie's current series employs 3D-printed objects, photography, projections, digital drawings, and sculptural elements. Her most recent exhibitions include Lines of Thought, CICA Museum, Gimpo, South Korea; Higher Learning, Fort Worth Community Arts Center; and A Contemporary Drawing Exhibition, Indiana University Union Street Gallery, Kokomo. She currently teaches at Commerce High School while seeking her MFA at Texas A&M University-Commerce (candidate for graduation in May 2020) and was chosen for the Graduate Excellence Award in 2019.

A Modern Billings offering from Katie Ritchie.

Modern Billings - Katie Ritchie
Photo courtesy of Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth
A Modern Billings offering from Katie Ritchie.
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This week's hot headlines

Magnolia Avenue restaurant closure leads this week's 5 most-read Fort Worth stories

Stephanie Allmon Merry
Nov 12, 2022 | 10:15 am
Salmon, Fixture
Photo courtesy of Farrar Food Photography [http://www.farrarfoodphotography.com]

Fixture's menu showed creativity, like this salmon.

Editor's note: A lot happened this week, so here's your chance to get caught up. Read on for the week's most popular headlines. Looking for the best things to do this weekend? Find that list here.

1. Fort Worth chef reluctantly closes Near Southside brunch favorite. A neighborhood restaurant from an acclaimed Fort Worth chef has closed: Fixture, which served comfort food and craft cocktails in Fort Worth's trendy Near Southside, closed on November 7, after eight years. Chef-owner Ben Merritt says he was sad to have to shutter the restaurant, but that circumstances that have emerged since the pandemic forced the closure.

2. All the Veterans Day 2022 deals in Dallas-Fort Worth that honor military service members. Ahead of Veterans Day on Friday, November 11, we unearthed some of the best deals around Dallas-Fort Worth to ease the strain on the bank accounts of all military veterans and current service members. While most special deals were for one day only, some businesses offer discounts for veterans year-round.

3. Texas will host CMT Music Awards for the first time ever in 2023. Big news for country music fans: the CMT Music Awards are coming to Texas. During Carrie Underwood's sold-out show in Austin on November 2, CMT Music Awards co-host Kelsea Ballerini came on stage to announce that country music's grandest night would come to the city's new Moody Center. Airing Sunday, April 2, 2023, the fan-voted awards ceremony will be hosted in Texas for the first time ever.

4. Pop rock powerhouse Paramore heads to Fort Worth on new North American arena tour. Fort Worth fans of alterna-emo-pop group Paramore and their radio-ready hooks can catch the trio next year during a just-announced stadium tour. The act famous for anthemic singles such as "Ain't It Fun," "Misery Business," and "Still Into You" will hit Dickies Arena on July 8, 2023, with Foals and The Linda Lindas as openers.

5. Where to see the most spectacular Christmas lights dazzling Dallas-Fort Worth in 2022. Tis barely the season for Dallas-Fort Worth to light up, merry and bright, for the 2022 holidays — from towering trees that twinkle and shine to dazzling drive-thru displays and immersive walk-thru experiences. Here's our 2022 guide to the biggest, brightest, most spectacular Christmas light displays in the area.

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Entertainment Venue News

Main Event adds in-house restaurant to fun & games at all Dallas-Fort Worth locations

Teresa Gubbins
Nov 11, 2022 | 2:57 pm
main event family kitchen
sanantonio.culturemap.com

Check out the spread at Main Event.

Main Event, the Dallas-based entertainment chain known for its arcade games, sports, and prizes, has added something edible to its roster: a full restaurant called Family Kitchen that puts a creative spin on arcade favorites such as burgers, sandwiches, and pizza.

The restaurant has been added to all six of its locations in the DFW area: two in Fort Worth, plus Grapevine, Grand Prairie, Lewisville, Plano, and Frisco. It launched November 1.

Main Event's chief marketing officer Ashley Zickefoose says the idea for a restaurant was inspired by the company's goal to be a place for families to bond.

“From shareable favorites with our Family Feasts to offering something tasty and memorable for everyone in the family, our new restaurant showcases that Main Event is not only the premier place to have fun, but also a top-notch place to dine with families and friends," Zickefoose says.

The menu was devised by chef Wiley Bates III, Main Event's director of culinary innovation, and features more than 50 items, from chips & queso to wings.

Highlights include:

  • Triple Lava Burger, featuring three hand-smashed patties with American cheese, cheese sauce, and caramelized onions
  • PBB&J Burger, with two burger patties topped with peanut butter, blueberry jam, American cheese & bacon
  • Pan Pepperoni Pizza, with giant pepperoni, tomato sauce, and garlic butter on a crisp pan crust from house-made dough

A big priority is shareables such as loaded fries, nachos, and pizzas, in family-size servings for four to six people, as well as more inclusive options such as vegan Beyond Meat and salads.

Mocktails are also offered, although selections such as a Cotton Candy Shirley seem to be more about being fun for kids than catering to sober adults. (Alcoholic drinks are available at the bar or the restaurant, but are not included on the online menu.)

"Family Kitchen was developed with extra care, attention to detail and a focus on premium quality ingredients," says Bates. "We're excited for our guests to experience our new menu offerings, which have been seasoned with salt, pepper, and love, and added playfulness that customers experience throughout the rest of the Main Event center."

Main Event is owned and operated by Dave & Buster’s Entertainment, which also owns Dave & Buster's, but is more kid-focused and larger, with billiards, bowling, arcade games, virtual reality games, laser tag, rock climbing, mini golf, gravity ropes course, and karaoke.

Brianna Caleri contributed to this story.

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Markets to Watch

Dallas-Fort Worth named the No. 2 real estate market to watch in 2023

Arden Ward
Nov 11, 2022 | 2:10 pm
Fort Worth skyline
Photo by benedek Getty Images
Fort Worth's a shining star in more ways than one.

The real estate market may be changing, but Dallas is still one of the hottest in the U.S. as we head into 2023.

The Urban Land Institute (ULI)'s annual Emerging Trends in Real Estate report, released October 27, names Dallas-Fort Worth the No. 2 U.S. market to watch in 2023, behind only Nashville.

The report, a joint project between ULI and PricewaterhouseCoopers, "provides an outlook on real estate investment and development trends, real estate finance and capital markets, property sectors, metropolitan areas, and other real estate issues throughout the United States and Canada."

It is based on surveys and interviews with real estate industry professionals.

After an in-depth analysis, the report identifies the top U.S. markets to watch, based on overall real estate prospects. Austin, San Antonio, and Houston join DFW in the top 15, at at Nos. 4, 12, and 14, respectively.

A top trend heading into 2023 is the continued "normalization" of markets following the post-COVID boom. Notes the report: "Almost every market in the country received lower ratings for both investment and development prospects this year, illustrating that outlooks are darkening just about everywhere following the brief post-COVID exuberance shown in last year’s survey across a variety of metrics."

However, it continues, "the pandemic seems to have reinforced some trends, notably the dominance of what we called the 'Magnet' markets — many of which are in warmer Sun Belt regions — at the top of the Emerging Trends 'Markets to Watch' standings."

Those "Magnet" markets include Dallas-Fort Worth, as well as Austin, San Antonio, Houston, and others. The report further categorizes markets into subgroups, with DFW, along with San Antonio and Houston, falling into the "Super Sun Belt" group.

"These markets are large and diverse but still affordable, forming powerhouse economies that attract a wide range of businesses. Despite their large population bases, most are among the fastest-growing markets in the United States. Moreover, their economic performance has been solid through thick and thin," the report states.

"Though every market lost jobs during the pandemic recession, recovery has been much quicker and more complete in the Super Sun Belt markets. These metro areas collectively have the highest average rating of any subgroup, as it did last year."

Austin is classified as a real estate "Supernova," defined as a smaller metro area (1 to 2 million residents) that has "exploded into prominence over the past decade or so."

According to the report, Austin has the highest investor demand of any market, with DFW just two spots below. DFW, meanwhile, tops the list for development/redevelopment opportunities, with Austin at No. 6. Both metros boast the strongest local economies among the markets studied, with Austin at No. 1 and DFW at No. 2.

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