Darkfield Wants To Scare the Hell Out of Dallas With Immersive Horror Installations
You don’t need to wait until Halloween to be terrified. This is much worse.
You don’t need to wait until Halloween to be terrified. This is much worse.
The Fort Worth artist has a remarkable exhibition in Dallas, “Red Rum Punch”
With three nights in three months, “Art Of The Machine” will educate about Narcan use and honor the artwork on the machines.
The cultural center maintains its gem status by highlighting Black artists.
May this one an artful year with Dallas-Fort Worth’s best visual art offerings.
The merch is available now only to Observer members. Jackdaw’s niece (and our social media editor) shares insight into the collab.
As the Trump administration’s deportation effort gathers steam, the artist and immigrant wants the world to watch carefully.
Curated by photographer Andrew Sherman, the exhibition is at Deep Ellum Art Company.
After complaints by Fort Worth residents, photographs by Sally Mann were seized by police.
Spurred by Chat GPT, the clever curation revels in the juxtaposition between art and technology.
The artist was formed in Dallas and found his Texas style in the Big Apple.
Which stories made our readers click and read this year? A lot of them were about angry people, for one thing.
The latest of the duo’s “retrofuturistic domains” is a must-see at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.
We’ll never let go, Jack: Here’s a preview of what’s aboard the exhibition coming early next year to Dallas.
Tyler Shelton is creating a community of support through Instagram.
Famed photographer Rambo Elliott’s eight-stop public tour is a healing homage to connection and vulnerability.
The beloved annual arts showcase will show a vision of the future as imagined by creatives from around the world.
For the Texas transplant and mother of Mark Lettieri, creativity is all in the family.
An artist on Instagram shared an altered screenshot of a Dallas Observer article claiming his painting of Donald Trump could sell for millions.
Are you an art enthusiast who loves Whataburger? You’ll also love Alli Koch.
Forget the Home Depot skeleton: The most in-demand Halloween decor is by Dallas artist Morgan Thaxton.
The new exhibition is a major retrospective of the British-American painter’s work.