Our gossip columnist and noted fashion plate serves up a year's worth of unforgettable images.
Omar Call makes a pastime out of baiting Christians.
Lost art or horrible slaughter? It's all in the eye of the slayer.
An ex-con's surprising blog celebrates a city's dark places.
The exhibit has an exceedingly short run just a few days, but smart art lovers will make the effort to see it. Sapirs abstract and intense paintings are nicely paired with Balaguras vivid and emotionally wrenching work.
Asked how he paints scenes from the Holocaust when he didnt experience the tragedy firsthand, he answers, Is what I paint history? Is it my own invention? When Im painting or writing, I conceive of events that must have happened and that statistically very likely happened. I can empathize with what I know happened and hopefully put that into my paintings.
Most people say the Holocaust ended in 1945. Actually, its still going on. Say a family was killed that would have had a child that would have become someone that I would have met now, but now I cant meet them because their family was wiped out. That affects me. That person could have been a great musician, and I cannot listen to that music, so we, the world, are being deprived of all the amputations of history that occurred. So it hasnt ended. It can never end, because it continues to affect us by what and who is not here.
See Art Born of Horror 9 a.m. to noon today, tomorrow and Sunday. 6100 Main. For information, call 713-348-4536 or visit www.boniuk.rice.edu. Free.
Wed., April 30, 6 p.m.; Thu., May 1, 9 a.m.-noon; Fri., May 2, 9 a.m.-noon; Sun., May 4, 9 a.m.-noon, 2008