Need to know where to go and what to do in Houston? Give a tip, post a comment or ask Veronica. Ask Veronica! » submitQuestion
Houston, known as the Energy Capital of the World, is also a progressive city where environmental initiatives abound. Go Green »
The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston is a non-collecting institution dedicated to presenting the best and most exciting international, national and regional art of the last 40 years.
The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston was founded in 1948 by a group of seven Houston citizens to present new art and to document its role in modern life through exhibitions, lectures and other activities. The Museum's first exhibitions were presented at various sites throughout the city, such as The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, and included This is Contemporary Art and L. Maholy-Nagy: Memorial Exhibition.
The success of these first efforts led in 1950 to the building of a small, professionally equipped facility where ambitious exhibitions of the work of Vincent Van Gogh, Joan Miró, Alexander Calder, Max Ernst, and John Biggers and his students from the then-fledgling Texas Negro College (now Texas Southern University), reflected Houston's receptiveness to new ideas.
By the close of the 1960s, the Museum's programs and audiences had outgrown the 1950 facility, and the trustees secured capital funds and a prominent site on the corner of Montrose and Bissonnet where the new building, designed by Gunnar Birkerts, was built. In 1972, the present facility opened with the controversial exhibition Ten, which featured several artists working in non-traditional media.
In the 1990s, the Museum sharpened its focus, concentrating on art made within the past 40 years and extending its reach internationally. The new millennium was celebrated by the Museum with a look back at some of the most arresting and important installations of the previous decade in the exhibition Outbound: Passages from the Nineties. Other thematic exhibitions of the new century have included Afterimage: Drawing Through Process; Subject Plural; and The Inward Eye. One-person shows have focused on groundbreaking figures in all media and have included Uta Barth; When One is Two: The Art of Alighiero e Boetti; William Kentridge and Juan Muñoz.
Visitors to the CAMH should be sure to stop by The Museum Shop at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston before leaving. There, guests will find an impressive assortment of artist and designer-made items, books, accessories and educational toys for kids.
Greater Houston Convention and Visitors Bureau - Member
The Contemporary Arts Museum Houston's Teen Council is pleased to present Perspectives 181: Human Nature, a group exhibition featuring work by Housto... View Details
Parallel Practices: Joan Jonas & Gina Pane brings together a selection of works by two artists born a short time apart who are renowned for their ... View Details
LaToya Ruby Frazier's work explores the psychological connections of intergenerational relationships within her family and community through photograp... View Details
This major international exhibition explores how graphic design has broadened its reach dramatically over the past decade, expanding from a specializ... View Details
Outside the Lines, with curatorial contributions by Bill Arning, Valerie Cassel Oliver, and Dean Daderko, kicks off CAMH's 65th anniversary season wit... View Details
