Psychic Fissures Unites International Artists Through Shared Vulnerability
The show marks the first installation at ARC Gallery, a new visual art space in Deep Ellum.
The show marks the first installation at ARC Gallery, a new visual art space in Deep Ellum.
How much should you tip your hairstylists, brow artist, spray tans and more? We asked the professionals.
A local, first-time director examines the work of a Texas archaeologist in a fascinating way.
Prepare for laughs and Texas pride as the new film follows Austin heroes fighting to save their golf course.
New executive director Emma Vernon now has her eyes set on funding the ambitious Boedeker Ice Cream Factory renovation.
Two budding local legends brought their A-games to late-night TV.
Dallas audiences may be the heroes Marvel Studios needs to get its mojo back.
Curated by Tessa Granowski, Nature of Things and OOps bOOks opened this month with a joint Dave Hickey installation.
Texas’ role as the ‘third coast’ for filmmaking is expanding, and DIFF’s schedule shows why that is.
Strickland will sign and talk about his new book You Can Kill Each Other After I Leave at Half Price Books April 26.
The Dallas-born actor is coming home to host a special screening and Q&A for Christopher Nolan’s film at the Angelika Film Center.
Beginning in Dallas, the group travels around Texas to advocate for the state as a filming destination.
Dallas and Fort Worth artists speak up for a project exploring female, nonbinary and queer voices in Soundings exhibition.
This extravagant home has an indoor batting cage, movie theater, wine cellar and barbershop. What more could you need?
A maker of sexual wellness devices is behind a campaign to counter a bill that would restrict sales of sex toys.
At these North Texas shops, escapism is only a book away.
Filmmaker Cooper Raiff got a taste of Hollywood’s bitter side when the plug was pulled on “The Trashers.”
The new movie is as Dallas as it gets and features local theater veterans.
The propaganda film invented camp, and it’s only appropriate that it gets the musical treatment.
The free event brings some of Latin America’s biggest stars, including the Argentine band Él Mató a un Policía Motorizado.
In its 17th edition, the annual event solidifies the city’s spot in the global marketplace.
Presented by the Flame Foundation and the Flamenco Fever respectively, Dallas is in for a season of Spanish culture.