Drinking Matilda

When I think of wine, the usual suspects come to mind—Italy, France, California, wherever Boone’s Farm is, etc., etc.—but I almost never think of Australia. Guess I’m out of the loop. Apparently somewhere in the Outback, the Aussies have trained kangaroos crushing grapes the old-fashioned way, producing fine wines such…

Found Art

“Look what I found!” That exclamation can indicate the discovery of trash or treasure, or in some cases, both. That’s the case for Central Texas artist and folk-art dealer Steve Wiman, who creates installation art from found objects that could be considered plain. His work features objects in various colors…

Going Stag

Wouldn’t it be nice to be one of the cool kids, just for once? Wouldn’t you like to be asked to the prom—as a sophomore? You would. You’d like to sway slowly under rows and rows of shimmering lights in the school gym to Garth Brooks’ classic “The Dance.” You’d…

Broadway Bible

Is there anything cuter than a children’s theatrical production of a classic fairy tale? Probably not. And of course there’s no better fairy tale than the book of Genesis, which takes flight as a musical this weekend at the Creative Arts Theater and School, 1100 W. Randol Mill Road in…

Jazzy Dish

Gumbo, that New Orleans treat, is kind of funky and kind of spicy. The same can be said for the Gumbo Kings, an authentic New Orleans Dixieland jazz band. The swinging sextet will spice up the usually sedate lawn of downtown’s Ross Plaza at the Dallas Museum of Art when…

Stoner Symphony

Have you ever thought that the solar system is just like one big molecule and…oh, you haven’t? Maybe it’s just us. What was I saying? Oh, yeah. As part of The British Are Coming…2006-2007 season, Symphony Arlington presents Gustav Holst’s The Planets. This particular concert promises to be a sort…

Spider Bites

What is it with the third installments in superhero film franchises? For whatever reason—oh, let’s just call it the lack of fresh ideas commingled with the love of money—they always strike out swinging their third time up to bat. It happened with Superman, when Richard Pryor became a superfriend hatching…

Goal(s)!

Jafar Panahi is a paradoxical populist. He makes crowd-pleasing art movies, often set in the midst of life—the urban crowd is one of his subjects—and is a virtuoso director of (non) actors. On the other hand, this most widely seen of Iranian filmmakers is also the most frequently banned. Like…

Post-War

Awash in daily news of mass savagery, collective memory grows short. We feel for the women of Afghanistan, but who these days remembers the war widows and rape victims of the 1992-1995 civil war that sent Yugoslavia to hell and brought it back a divided country? Now comes the young…

Back in Black

Dutch filmmaker Paul Verhoeven is known in America for his flicks about crazy ladies. After all, he helped bring us Showgirls and Basic Instinct. But in Black Book, featured this weekend by the critically acclaimed film series Magnolia at the Modern, we see another side of Verhoeven. Sure, there’s a…

Stuffed and Mounted

I can’t aim a gun for the life of me—I always sucked at Duck Hunt. I can say with certainty that I would never make a good hunter (besides, I don’t want to shoot animals, anyway, but that’s one girl’s opinion). But the way I figure it, if someone’s going…

The Spy Guy

Before becoming the Senior Lecturer at the George Bush School of Government and Public Service at Texas A&M University, James Olson was an undercover operative in the CIA. In fact, according to former Secretary of Defense Robert M. Gates, Olson “is a legend in the clandestine service,” something that is…

Picture Pages

Being an avid collector of sweet rock show posters, I’ve always been fascinated by screenprinting. Unfortunately I have neither the skill or the sense of color to ever attempt screenprinting something on my own. Ditto for lithographs, woodcuts, mezzotints, engraving and pretty much anything else besides pencils, pens and crayons…

A Truly Divine Code

I figured out midway through a screening of The DaVinci Code last year that the plot essentially hinged on an elaborate scavenger hunt. Tom Hanks and his hair flew through the streets hunting clues to solve a screwy puzzle with the help of Audrey Tautou and her significant pout. If…

Get Your Rocks Off

One of my favorite displays in the Earth science classroom was the little box that held the different minerals used in the Mohs hardness scale; of course, over the years some sticky-fingered students had pocketed the beryl and the quartz, and I’m pretty sure there never was a diamond, but…

Art Grows Up

Alexandra Nechita, once a 6-year-old art prodigy dubbed “the petite Picasso,” is all grown up. She’s 21 now, and though she could have petered out as a burned-out has-been back in the day, she instead steadily improved on her early genius and has cranked out artwork for Bill Clinton, George…

Park City Thrifty

Tired of hot-wiring a Highland Park Hummer, driving around the Park Cities every trash day and digging through the diamond-encrusted garbage for goodies on the cheap? Me too. I love those Tory Burch flats I scored off Douglas Avenue (so they smelled of rotten eggs, like I care.) However, they…

We Welcome You to Puppetland

In elementary school I discovered Land of Oz in the public library. I’d never heard of the movie or Judy Garland. I thought the Land of Oz was found only in the series of adventures written by L. Frank Baum, from The Wonderful Wizard of Oz through the 14th book,…

Dallas Swap

Wanna swap closets? No, not you. I was asking Gwen Stefani, who’s standing behind you. (Kidding. Unless you’re Gavin Rossdale.) But she’s not likely to give up her designer duds anytime soon, so I’ll just check out the Dallas Closet Swap at the Women’s Museum at Fair Park, 3800 Parry…

Photo Podiatry

Ange Fitzgerald seems to have a foot fetish. But it’s not what you think. The Dallas-by-way-of-Nebraska-New-York-and-Seattle photographer shoots portraits, mainly, including pairs of tootsies that say more about form and feeling than most folks can from the neck up. Such is Fitzgerald’s M.O. She shoots simple things with a simple—but…

Supersize Me

Although we’re no strangers to the phrase “better living through chemistry,” our take on it is probably a little different than the approach offered in Authenticity and Ambivalence: The Debate About Using Medical Technologies to “Enhance” Human Beings. As part of The University of Texas at Dallas’ Public Forum series,…

Tour de Frisco

As I settle into my thirties, I’m leaning toward the healthier side of life–working out, eating better, doing cardio–although it doesn’t show. Dang it. With spring in the air, I really want to invest in a bike, because I can only go so many miles on the elliptical before getting…