THU 9/16

Break out that beret and those thick-soled Timberlands, art lovers: Downtown
Stomp Around is back around. For the sixth year running, the event is heralding
the start of the Houston arts season. Five different downtown galleries are
putting on lavish simultaneous openings, and we — artistic aficionados, consumers
and connoisseurs — are encouraged to agitate the pavement between all of them,
feasting our optic nerves till our collective visual cortex is fit to burst.
As befits an election season, this year’s Stomp Around has a political bent.
2004: America and the Globe, by Margaret Crane and Jon Winet, will be
on display at DiverseWorks all the way through the November showdown, offering
up-to-the-minute artistic interpretations of the election as it unfolds. The
art even extends to the parking lot: In White House/Greenhouse, artist
Karin Giusti has created a voter registration booth in the form of that most
famous piece of real estate at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.

But there’s plenty on display here for the apolitical gallery-galumpher. The
O’Kane Gallery has pulled together an exhibition of rarely seen works by the
legendary, late Texas found-objects painter Walter Cotton, and Joan Wich & Co.
is presenting recent revisionist portraiture by Houston’s Nicholas Bakaysa.
Meanwhile, shutterbugs can traipse on over to FotoFest to view decades of unapologetic
soul-stealing from across the international landscape, including works from
Latin America and the former Czechoslovakia. Opens at 6 p.m. Thursday, September
16. DiverseWorks, 1117 East Freeway. For a list of participating galleries,
call 713-223-8346 or visit www.diverseworks.org.
Free. — Scott Faingold

From Nellie, with Love

SAT 9/18

“Mr. President, you can’t say Dallas doesn’t love you,” said Nellie Connally,
first lady of Texas, to John F. Kennedy as they drove past throngs of waving,
cheering locals in downtown Dallas on November 22, 1963. As the president smiled
back, a bullet ripped through his throat and into Governor John Connally’s back.
Her husband critically wounded and the president of the United States murdered
in front of her, Nellie Connally didn’t decide to share her story until recently.
Now, in an era of endless conspiracy theories, you can get a perspective from
someone who witnessed the assassination firsthand. Connally discusses her memoirs,
From Love Field, at 2 p.m. Saturday, September 18. Barnes & Noble Bookstore,
7026 Highway 6 North. For information, call 281-861-6842 or visit www.barnesandnoble.com.
Free. — Steven Devadanam

Greek to You

THU 9/16

You may not be able to pronounce Greek dishes like dolmades, spanakopita
or souvlakia, but it’s hard to talk with your mouth full, anyway.
The second annual “Greeks in the Kitchen” allows foodies plentiful samples of
saliva-inducing Greek appetizers, entrรฉes and desserts from more than
a dozen Houston restaurants. “Eating [like a Greek] is about more than just
food. It’s enjoying and celebrating life, good people and good conversation,”
says Sharon Papadopoulos of organizers the Sisters of Penelope. The event doubles
as a fund-raiser for the group’s affordable housing project for seniors. Papadopoulos
(try saying that ten times fast) hopes the Olympics will inspire more
people to go Greek this weekend. Women’s beach volleyball attire, however, is
optional. 5:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m. Thursday, September 16. S.P. Martel Hall, Annunciation
Greek Orthodox Cathedral, 3511 Yoakum. For information, call 713-771-2875. $25
to $30. — Bob Ruggiero

Dream Works
Jessica Stockholder’s art is off the “Wall”

FRI 9/17

Stumbling into one of Jessica Stockholder’s art pieces is like finding yourself
in a dreamlike alternate version of daily reality. Consider the hodgepodge of
materials used in her work: 1989 is made out of a car door, Sheetrock,
cloth, oil, acrylic and latex paint, orange light, yellow electrical cord, wood
and hardware, while 1988 includes underwear and newspaper. Blaffer Gallery
is presenting an overview of 15 years of Stockholder’s installations, dubbed
“Kissing the Wall: Works 1988-2003.” Is it painting? Sculpture? Both? Neither?
You decide. Opening reception 7 p.m. Friday, September 17. Through November
21. University of Houston, 120 Fine Arts Building. For information, call 713-743-9530
or visit www.blaffergallery.org.
Free. — Scott Faingold

Showing Off Baby

MON 9/20

A dark film set in rural Texas circa 1962, Baby follows a young couple, Chrissy
and Bud, whose domestic tranquillity is shattered when Bud and his ex-con brother
Joe Pete attempt to sell daughter Baby for $10,000. โ€œItโ€™s film noir,โ€
says Polly Palomino, who produced the film in Houston with her sister Nikki.
Fans of Orson Welles and Hitchcock, the Palomino sisters hope to garner interest
in their Texas-based films and maybe even become as famous as another Hollywood
sibling film duo. โ€œIf we get as lucky as the Cohen brothers,โ€ says
Polly, โ€œweโ€™ll be doing good.โ€ Baby screens at 8 p.m. Monday,
September 20. Fitzgeraldโ€™s, 2706 White Oak Drive. For information, call
713-781-6978 or visit www.palominoproductions.com. Free. — Steven Devadanam