LOCAL Houston | The City Guide FEBRUARY 2016 | Page 34
FRESH ARTS SCENE
HERE IS A MONTH THAT EVERYONE CAN FALL IN LOVE WITH.
By Ariel Jones
WHAT SHALL WE DO NEXT? | DIVERSEWORKS
Exhibition is open through March 19.
Gallery Hours: Wed: 12–6pm, Thurs/Fri/Sat: 12–8pm
What Shall We Do Next? is a group exhibition that examines how technology and advertising have shifted our relationships to our physical bodies, our shaping of subjectivity and
notions of the real. The exhibition is comprised of a variety of works across mediums – including
drawings, paintings, video animations and performance – that all acknowledge and incorporate the effects of technology, commerce and advertising. The artists brought together in What
Shall We Do Next? – Danielle Dean, Kristin Lucas, Julien Prévieux and the artist collective
Versace Versace Versace (Loriel Beltran, Domingo Castillo, Aramis Gutierrez and Jonathan
Gonzalez) – consider ideas of the real in relation to physical materials, technology and advertising, as well as how the body can act as both material and ideological subject. DiverseWorks
is located at 3400 Main Street, Suite 292, Houston, Texas 77002. Entry is free.
For more information, visit www.diverseworks.org.
DANIEL KOREN: THE MOST IMPORTANT THING
LOTT ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS
February 18–20, Performances are at 8pm.
Daniel Koren is an Emmy-nominated comedian/composer based in Brooklyn, NY. A graduate
of Berklee College of Music, Koren composes music for TV and directs commercials and music
videos. His innovative musical-comedy work with the Koren Ensemble gained excessive popularity and received more than a million views on YouTube. Currently on tour with The Most
Important Thing, a musical comedy live show, with a choir of Daniel’s alter egos projected
on a screen. Tickets are $25. Performances take place at MATCH, 3400 Main Street,
Houston, TX 77002. For more information, visit: www.lottentertainmentpresents.com.
UNCHAMBERED: “PIANO VS. PIANO” | ROCO Houston
Sunday, February 28, at 5pm
Pianist Christopher McKiggan takes the MATCH stage with not one, but two pianos! Piano
vs. Piano offers a side-by-side comparison of an 1863 Steinway vs. a modern one