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The lovely Shipley’s Do-Nut sign.
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It was free Sunday at the MFAH, thanks to Target’s generosity. Finally, the missus and I went to the “Red Hot – Asian Art Today” show. It was so nice I might be paying just to see it again. And, so good, that my wife (a particularly harsh critic of modern art) wished that it was a permanent show.
We also saw this crime against spelling…
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Last week, I went to the opening of Kirsten Hassenfeld’s opening at the Rice University Gallery. It was worth dealing with the stupid parking situation because the show is a beauty. My pictures don’t do justice to the large, delicate, nuanced pieces.
I would have attended her free lecture the following day, but I promised a neighbor that I would help him move. He was moving his girlfriend back to Boston. Having moved cross-country three time in the last eight years, I knew wouldn’t fit all the stuff in the 12-foot truck he rented. As we packed his truck and there was less and less room, I told him that he should get a 16-foot truck. He said that it would all fit. It didn’t.
I now have a large box of really nice, gourmet food, four folding chairs and a new TV.
My sweetie is modeling my favorite shirt I never wear. I worked an Asian art show in Vegas years ago. All the shipping and packing materials had this great mama/baby cat logo. I asked if they had any extra t-shirts, and the gift-prone Japanese guests gave me this one. They must have thought that I doubled in size when I left the museum because they got me a XL when I’m a M. I would wear this all the time if it wasn’t a circus tent on me.
It’s a perfect shirt for mom-to-be.
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It’s the perfect sign. A short name, a drawing of a drink, an arrow to show you where, and when you get there, you’ll be staring at the large TV. Drink and watch the tube, that’s what you’ll be doing at the ROLL-N.
Thursday
I usually get my hair done by the missus. It saves money and she is unwilling to make me look bad. But since she started working, I was getting shaggy. After reading about Raymond’s Barber Shop in The Houstonist I figured that was the place to go. I like going to the old-school barbers.
I got there, a couple of guys ahead of me, and a cop showed up afterwards. After removing it to sit down beside me, the cop asked me to keep an eye on his gun belt if he fell asleep. I don’t know if he was joking. Between watching Divorce Court on TV and reading the Playboys and Penthouses supplied, he never feel asleep. The one-man operation was running slow, so I waited a good hour and a half. A long wait because the son was there without his father. When I got my haircut it looked fine, but not as good as my wife’s work. My favorite part was that the two barber’s chairs had ashtrays built into the armrests. I don’t have that at home.
Went to Metro Retro Vintage on Washington. My wife and I once joked that we don’t buy art; we buy lamps. The vintage place had this beautiful lamp, celebrating the Russian space program, that would have been a nice addition to our collection. A small, chrome rocket ship atop of a clear Lucite column of smoke and flame, lit orange from the inside. The Lucite column fanned out to make the base and around the bottom were symbols of Russian industry and history, such as factories, cars, a sword smashing a swastika. Far too pricey, but truly unique. Like so many things, something else that would look great in the apartment that we will never have.
Friday
I encountered the nicest postal employee while trying to use an automated mail system in the foyer of the local post office. The blank look of stupidity and confusion on my face must have tipped off the postal carrier. She came over and just plugged everything into the machine’s menus.
“Yes, it’s over 3/4s of an inch, no, you don’t want this delivery confirmation crap…” Etc, etc, and so on until the label was printed and applied to the package and she put it in the slot to start it on its journey. She looked at the receipt the machine spit out and said something like, “After all that, don’t forget to go online and enter the drawing for ten thousand dollars.” Nice.
After that I went to Domy Bookstore, which I had read about but never visited. Full of beautiful graphic novels, art books, plushes and all sorts of other things that I didn’t need but really wanted. I left without spending a dime but wished I could have bought a book on the London graffiti artist Banksy.
Party with the wife’s coworkers that night. From what my wife has been saying her new job is turning out quite well and the party was more of the same goodness. Verdict: nice non-snobs who made the spouses and significant others feel right at home.
Saturday
After an afternoon slacking off at the house I hit about six galleries in the evening. I joined a former Atlantan, who, like myself is employed by the arts. We both relocated to Houston at almost the same time and it was nice to see a familiar face. Funny thing about the galleries was that all they were within walking distance of my new place and I didn’t even know about them. We were both really surprised that the opening ended at 8pm. In our experience, most art events like this run until 9 or 10 pm. It seemed to cut short the party, so we headed over to the Alabama Ice House for her first time and my second. It was a good introduction; the Rollerderby Girls were doing fundraising, dogs were running about, and a girl was twirling fire while a band played on the main stage. I’m liking the Icehouse more and more. $2.25 Lonestar beers, can’t go wrong there.
Sunday
Cleaning house, laundry, a quick trip to M2 Gallery in the Heights to see the 600 sq mi: Photos From Houston show, and blogging
Even before I moved to Houston I knew it was going to break my heart in due time.

“Such appearance doesn’t fit for Red (communistic) Moscow!”

And Moscow after planned progress.
These propaganda posters (from English Russia) don’t seem all that different from the current tendencies to demolish the old and historic for the new and (usually) mundane. In the US it’s capitalism that often seems to be preservation’s worst enemy. Houston is no different than many cities in its rush to tear down buildings that don’t offer their owners modern convenience and/or profitability. Even before we moved I was reading the Houston Architecture Info Forum and they were lamenting the destruction of worthwhile buildings in the city.
Local blogger Guardian of the Non Sequitur already commented in the Alabama Theater Bookstop post that the building was endangered. And looking at the Houston Mod news page just confirms that. I had already planned on doing a photo shoot in the converted theater and now I need to do so even more than ever.
Historic Shopping Center and Theaters in Danger
Tenants of the River Oaks Shopping Center have been told that the owners, Weingarten Realty Investors, plan to demolish the northeast section of the historic center and the River Oaks Theater building to make way for a multi-story Barnes & Noble bookstore and a high-rise residential building designed by Hermes Architects according to the Houston Chronicle. Hermes Architects is best known for designing the Portofino Shopping Center (below) of 2004 in The Woodlands, Texas, a Venetian-themed concoction made of Styrofoam and artificial stucco. The River Oaks Shopping Center at 2017-2047 West Gray Avenue, designed by Houston architects Milton McGinty and Stayton Nunn with Oliver C. Winston, opened in 1937. It was published nationally in Architectural Record and American City magazines shortly after its completion. It is of national architectural significance.
The former Alabama Theater Building at 2900 S. Shepherd Drive of 1939, which Weingarten Realty Investors also controls, may be endangered as well. Community activists fear that if Barnes & Noble opens a bookstore in the River Oaks Shopping Center it will close its location in the Alabama Theater Building run under the Bookstop name. Ironically, in 1989 Weingarten Realty Investors with Kaldis Development Interests commissioned Mike Treadway Architects to sensitively restore the theater for use as a retail space.
For more details on this story please see the following articles
More information on the River Oaks shopping center can be found in the Cite Magazine article on the River Oaks center
The Greater Houston Preservation Alliance has added these buildings to its endangered buildings list.
The New York Times – Fighting the Wrecking Ball to Save Houston Landmarks
Houston Chronicle – Historic theater could soon fade into history, 7/22/2006
Houston Chronicle – Battle to save River Oaks center, 7/28/2006
To sign the petition please go to http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/riveroaks/
Links
Battle to save River Oaks center
Cite Magazine article on the River Oaks center
Fighting the Wrecking Ball to Save Houston Landmarks
Historic theater could soon fade into history
http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/riveroaks/
The Greater Houston Preservation Alliance“
Watched TV on Friday night! Oh, the madness!
Saturday, went to the library to try and get a library card. Didn’t have the right ID. Crazy! That night, audience participation Buffy the Vampire Slayer at River Oak Theater followed by House of Pies. That was really fun, actually.
And today, GROCERY SHOPPING!