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Cafe Leonelli Opens at MFAH, Ritual Shutters for New Concept

Cafe Leonelli Opens at MFAH, Ritual Shutters for New Concept
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Michelin-Starred chefs head two new restaurants at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston

Michelin-Starred chefs head two new restaurants at Museum of Fine Arts, Houston FacebookTwitterEmail Installation view of Trenton Doyle Hancock’s Color Flash for Chat and Chew, Paris Texas in Seventy-Two, 2019–2020.Thomas Dubrock The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (MFAH) on Tuesday announced two new onsite restaurants, both helmed by Michelin-Starred chefs, set to open at 1001 Bissonnet St. The concepts are a collaboration with New York City’s Bastion Restaurants, the group behind Houston’s La Table restaurant near Uptown Park. Cafe Leonelli, scheduled to open in March, and Le Jardinier, slotted for April, are situated in adjacent spaces within the Kinder Building. The $476 million museum expansion made its debut in November.

Seven first wow impressions to see at MFAH s Kinder Building

First impressions of a gift to Houston that will keep on giving. Molly Glentzer December 30, 2020Updated: January 4, 2021, 11:27 am Aristide Maillol s La Riviere (The River) rests atop a gently trickling reflection pond between the new Kinder Building and the Cullen Sculpture Garden at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, which director Gary Tinterow refers to as the hinge of the campus. Photo: Molly Glentzer / Houston Chronicle The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston’s new Kinder Building promises to be a gift that gives for decades. Except for light-sensitive works on paper and photographs, most of the permanent collection artworks installed throughout its galleries will be in place for a year. Taking it all in during one trip could be overwhelming. Knowing each trip back will be a treat, I am looking forward to a slower savor, planning to pace myself later.

MFAH celebrates Peter Marzio, the man who made the museum what it is today

An exhibit called The Marzio Years charts the institution s explosive growth under his stewardship Molly Glentzer December 29, 2020Updated: December 29, 2020, 8:30 pm Peter C. Marzio served as director of the Houston Museum of Fine Arts from 1982 until his death of cancer in 2010. In this photograph from early in his career, he stands next to Walter Ufer’s painting “Anna.” Photo: Timothy Bullard / Houston Chronicle The late Peter Marzio used to answer humbly when people asked what drove his acquisition choices for the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. “Well, you know, you can do the usual this is quality, this is provenance, this work is the right size, it addresses a gap or builds on strengths in the collection,” he might say. “But in the end, what really matters is, if a work of art makes me want to tap someone on the shoulder and say, ‘Look at that.’”

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