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DADA and Deep Ellum Community Association Join Forces For Fall Gallery Walk September 17 AND 21, 2013 Including Bike Swarm, DADA Docents, Dallas Love Project In honor of International Peace Day, the Dallas Art Dealers Association and Deep Ellum Community Association are joining forces for Fall Gallery Walk on Saturday, September 21, 2013, featuring thirty-five of DADA’s leading member galleries, museums, and nonprofit art spaces as well as 14 galler- ies in Deep Ellum. The event includes DADA Docents providing informa- tion at selected art spaces, and the DADA Bike Swarm bringing together the Bike Friendly groups from Oak Cliff, Design District, Deep Ellum, and The Cedars. Paintings from the Dallas Love Project are also on display at select member galleries. Two films in honor of International Peace Day will be screened at Samuel Lynne Galleries. DADA’s Fall Panel Discussion, “Embracing Latin American Art,” will be Tuesday, September 17, at 7 p.m. at Cathedral Guadalupe. For more information, visit dallasartdealers.org or call 214.914.1099. Media Sponsors are Patron Magazine and moderndallas.net. Tuesday, September 17, 7–8:30 p.m. DADA Fall Panel Discussion EMBRACING LATIN AMERICAN ART At Cathedral Guadalupe, 2215 Ross Avenue. Catherine Cuellar is the moderator. Panelists include Tomas Bustos, Johannes Boekhoudt, Guillermo Cardenas, Viola Delgado, and Benjamin Lima. Tickets are available at dallasartdealers.org for $10 in advance or $15 at the door. The event ben- efits the Edith Baker Art Scholarship and Artist Career Development Fund. DADA is pleased to partner with the Creative Arts Center and the Latino Cultural Center for these panels, with funding provided by the City of Dallas Office of Cultural Affairs and the Texas Commission on the Arts. Saturday, September 21, noon–8 p.m. DADA Fall Gallery Walk, in collaboration with Deep Ellum Community Association, Dallas Love Project, and International Peace Day Art lovers of every description will have the opportunity to socialize and tour a full spectrum of galleries and special exhibitions all in one day. Start at any member location and pick up a map or print one out online at dal- lasartdealers.org. Hours at each gallery vary; please see individual listings. For more information, call 214.914.1099 or e-mail info@dallasartdealers. org. Paintings from the Dallas Love Project will be at select DADA galleries. Two films celebrating International Peace Day will be screened at 2 p.m. and 4 p.m. at Samuel Lynne Galleries. Saturday, September 21, noon–8 p.m. / DADA Docents Program High school students serve as exhibition hosts at select DADA galleries. Training is open to all high school students on Saturday, September 7, 10:30 a.m., at The MAC, 3120 McKinney Avenue. RSVP at [email protected]. Saturday, September 21, 9 p.m.-midnight DADA Fall Gallery Walk After Party Enjoy late night art at Dallas Contemporary, 161 Glass Street. Saturday, September 21, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. / DADA Bike Swarm In honor of International Peace Day, several Bike Friendly groups will come together to ride in DADA’s Bike Swarm. Cyclists of all age levels and abilities are invited. Bike Friendly Oak Cliff, Bike Friendly Cedars, Bike Friendly Design District, and Bike Friendly Deep Ellum will work together to cover the neighborhoods of Oak Cliff, Deep Ellum, and the Design District. Bike Swarm is part of the DADA Fall Gallery Walk on Saturday, September 21. Riders can start at any of the following stops: 11 a.m. Meet at Oak Cliff Cultural Center, 223 West Jefferson Boulevard (for a ride from Oak Cliff to Deep Ellum for lunch at Burger Fest and a visit to area galleries); 2 p.m. Meet at Kettle Art Gallery, 2650B Main Street (ride from Deep Ellum to Design District for a visit to area galleries); 3 p.m. Meet at Meddlesome Moth, 1621 Oak Lawn Avenue (ride from here for tour of Design District); 5 p.m. riders will return to their home bases in Oak Cliff, Deep Ellum, or The Cedars. The event is FREE and includes a self-guided tour of the art galleries located in the Design District as well as galleries in Deep Ellum. Visit www.facebook.com/ events/633281223363372/ to register for the event. www.dallasartdealers.org Dallas Art Dealers Association presents Get on your bike and ride to celebrate International Peace Day September 21

Transcript of 8 For Fall Gallery Walk September 17 21, 2013 6 2 3...

DADA and Deep Ellum Community Association Join ForcesFor Fall Gallery Walk September 17 AND 21, 2013

Including Bike Swarm, DADA Docents, Dallas Love Project

In honor of International Peace Day, the Dallas Art Dealers Association and

Deep Ellum Community Association are joining forces for Fall Gallery Walk

on Saturday, September 21, 2013, featuring thirty-five of DADA’s leading

member galleries, museums, and nonprofit art spaces as well as 14 galler-

ies in Deep Ellum. The event includes DADA Docents providing informa-

tion at selected art spaces, and the DADA Bike Swarm bringing together

the Bike Friendly groups from Oak Cliff, Design District, Deep Ellum, and

The Cedars. Paintings from the Dallas Love Project are also on display at

select member galleries. Two films in honor of International Peace Day

will be screened at Samuel Lynne Galleries. DADA’s Fall Panel Discussion,

“Embracing Latin American Art,” will be Tuesday, September 17, at 7 p.m. at

Cathedral Guadalupe. For more information, visit dallasartdealers.org or call

214.914.1099. Media Sponsors are Patron Magazine and moderndallas.net.

Tuesday, September 17, 7–8:30 p.m. DADA Fall Panel Discussion

EMBRACING LATIN AMERICAN ART

At Cathedral Guadalupe, 2215 Ross Avenue. Catherine Cuellar is the

moderator. Panelists include Tomas Bustos, Johannes Boekhoudt, Guillermo

Cardenas, Viola Delgado, and Benjamin Lima. Tickets are available at

dallasartdealers.org for $10 in advance or $15 at the door. The event ben-

efits the Edith Baker Art Scholarship and Artist Career Development Fund.

DADA is pleased to partner with the Creative Arts Center and the Latino

Cultural Center for these panels, with funding provided by the City of

Dallas Office of Cultural Affairs and the Texas Commission on the Arts.

Saturday, September 21, noon–8 p.m. DADA Fall Gallery Walk, in collaboration with Deep Ellum Community Association, Dallas Love Project, and International Peace Day

Art lovers of every description will have the opportunity to socialize and

tour a full spectrum of galleries and special exhibitions all in one day. Start

at any member location and pick up a map or print one out online at dal-

lasartdealers.org. Hours at each gallery vary; please see individual listings.

For more information, call 214.914.1099 or e-mail info@dallasartdealers.

org. Paintings from the Dallas Love Project will be at select DADA galleries.

Two films celebrating International Peace Day will be screened at 2 p.m.

and 4 p.m. at Samuel Lynne Galleries.

Saturday, September 21, noon–8 p.m. / DADA Docents Program

High school students serve as exhibition hosts at select DADA galleries.

Training is open to all high school students on Saturday, September 7,

10:30 a.m., at The MAC, 3120 McKinney Avenue. RSVP at

[email protected].

Saturday, September 21, 9 p.m.-midnight DADA Fall Gallery Walk After Party

Enjoy late night art at Dallas Contemporary, 161 Glass Street.

Saturday, September 21, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. / DADA Bike Swarm In honor of International Peace Day, several Bike Friendly groups will come together to ride in DADA’s Bike Swarm. Cyclists of all age levels and abilities are invited. Bike Friendly Oak Cliff, Bike Friendly Cedars, Bike Friendly Design District, and Bike Friendly Deep Ellum will work together to cover the neighborhoods of Oak Cliff, Deep Ellum, and the Design District. Bike Swarm is part of the DADA Fall Gallery Walk on Saturday, September 21. Riders can start at any of the following stops: 11 a.m. Meet at Oak Cliff Cultural Center, 223 West Jefferson Boulevard (for a ride from Oak Cliff to Deep Ellum for lunch at Burger Fest and a visit to area galleries); 2 p.m. Meet at Kettle Art Gallery, 2650B Main Street (ride from Deep Ellum to Design District for a visit to area galleries); 3 p.m. Meet at Meddlesome Moth, 1621 Oak Lawn Avenue (ride from here for tour of Design District); 5 p.m. riders will return to their home bases in Oak Cliff, Deep Ellum, or The Cedars. The event is FREE and includes a self-guided tour of the art galleries located in the Design District as well as galleries in Deep Ellum. Visit www.facebook.com/events/633281223363372/ to register for the event.

www.facebook.com/dallasartdealersassociation twitter.com/DADA25th www.dallasartdealers.org

About DADA

The Dallas Art Dealers Association is an affilia-

tion of established independent gallery owners

and nonprofit art organizations in the Dallas

metropolitan area. It is a professional and

educational resource for the community at large.

Members of the DADA Art Dealers Association

have an established reputation for honesty,

integrity, and professionalism among their peers,

and must make a substantial contribution to the

cultural life of the community by offering works

of high aesthetic quality and presenting worth-

while exhibitions. DADA is dedicated to promot-

ing the highest standards of ethical practice within

the profession and to increasing public awareness

of the role and responsibilities of reputable art

dealers and nonprofit visual art spaces.

About the Edith Baker Art Scholarship

and Artist Career Development Fund

To celebrate its 20th anniversary in 2005, DADA

created a scholarship honoring a respected

member of the Dallas art community and one of

its founding members, Edith Baker. Edith owned

and directed The Edith Baker Gallery in Dallas

for nearly thirty years before retiring in 2004.

Every year, the Edith Baker Art Scholarship and

Artist Career Development Fund, a 501(c)(3),

financially benefits a student pursuing the study

of visual arts along with giving that student a

gallery internship, a mentor, and an artist studio

visit. The scholarship also presents a career fair

at Booker T. Washington High School for the

Performing and Visual Arts, two juried exhibi-

tions of Booker T and Dallas County Community

College students’ artwork, a docent-training

program, biannual educational events, and Art

Chicas and Art Chicos at La Reunion TX.

About Creative Arts Center

Creative Arts Center of Dallas (CAC) provides

a nurturing environment for people to discover,

develop, and express their artistic visions.

Located on a two-acre campus four miles east

of downtown Dallas, CAC offers more than

five hundred classes and workshops per year

in such disciplines as ceramics, clay sculpture,

drawing, glass, jewelry, metal arts, mosaic, paint-

ing, photography, printmaking, and stone

carving. CAC also offers free arts programming

to disadvantaged children. Not only a visual arts

school, CAC is also a thriving arts community for

a diverse range of students from teens to seniors.

Visit CAC at 2360 Laughlin Drive in East Dallas

or creativeartscenter.org.

About Deep Ellum Community Association

Deep Ellum Community Association’s mission

is to promote, preserve, and protect Deep Ellum

as a diverse urban, sustainable walking neighbor-

hood built on a culture of organic, independent

creativity. For more information about DECA,

please visit deepellumtexas.com or e-mail

[email protected].

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Visit www.dallasartdealers.org for additional maps.

Dallas Art Dealers Association presents

Get on your bike and ride to celebrate

International Peace Day September 21

1. DESIGN DISTRICT

American Fine Art1611 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas 75207214.749.7749www.americanfineart.comartsales@americanfineart.com

Contemporary glass tables by Gini Garcia, who has been active as a glass artist and designer for over 20 years in San Antonio, Texas. She is the first artist to be chosen as a woman of influence in the arts by the San Antonio Business Journal and has received a Citation of honor for contributions to the built environment in the State of Texas by The American Institute of Architects. Garcia’s contemporary glass tables and chandelier will be in the new glass section of American Fine Art.

2– 8 p.m.

Banks Fine Art, LLC1313 Slocum Street, Suite 103Dallas, Texas 75207 [email protected]

ART: Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall, an exhibition of antique oils and works by liv-ing artists of France, Russia, and the U.S. Salon Style, a grouping of paintings with a common theme, including works by Albert Andre, Edouard Leon Cortes, Marcel Dyf, Eugene Galien-Laloue, Francois Gall, Hugo Irureta, Abel Lauvray, Charles Levier, Bill Parker, Pierre Gaston, Jean Rigaud, and Raymond Thibesart. Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Noon – 6 p.m.

Beaux Arts1505 Hi Line DriveDallas, Texas [email protected]

The Figurative Drawings of Arthur Blanchard

Noon – 8 p.m.

Craighead Green Gallery1011 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Group show of Dallas painters Marci Crawford Harnden and Kendall Stallings and Dallas sculptor Marla Ziegler

11 a.m. – 7 p.m.

Dallas Contemporary161 Glass StreetDallas, Texas 75207214.821.2522www.dallascontemporary.orginfo@dallascontemporary.org

New work by Georg Herold, FAILE, Kevin Todora, Kristen Cochran, and Lucia Simek

9 p.m.– midnight

Galerie Züger1215 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas 75207214.749.7713www.galeriezugerdallas.cominfo@galeriezugerdallas.com

Paintings by James Jensen Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Artist in attendance 2 – 8 p.m.

The Goss-Michael Foundation1405 Turtle Creek BoulevardDallas, Texas 75207214.696.0555www.gossmichaelfoundation.orginfo@gossmichaelfoundation.org

Closed during Fall Gallery Walk

Jacques Lamy Art Gallery1607 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Paintings by Marie Claire Pajeile and sculptures by Jason Mehl

2 – 8 p.m.

LuminArte Gallery1727 East Levee StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Colombiarte, a three-part exhibition cel-ebrating Colombian Independence Day that features artworks in a variety of media Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Noon – 10 p.m.

Mary Tomás Gallery1110 Dragon StreetBuilding 1080Dallas, Texas [email protected]

Johannes Boekhoudt— An Artist of Consequence Large paintings in oil, works on paper in charcoal, and mixed media by Latin American artist Johannes Boekhoudt. Boek-houdt’s style utilizes the canvas as a form of communication for social commentary and self-examination. His work has been presented in exhibitions throughout Latin America and the Caribbean.

Noon – 8 p.m. Reception 6 – 8 p.m.

Samuel Lynne Galleries1105 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Group exhibition featuring paintings by JD Miller, Philip J. Romano, and Lea Fisher in celebration of the gallery’s 5th anniver-sary. Dallas Love Project painting on exhibi-tion and two film screenings at 2 and 4 p.m. in honor of International Peace Day

11 a.m. – 9 p.m. Reception 6 – 9 p.m.

Sun to Moon Gallery1515 East Levee StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Show of works by photographer, master printmaker, and educator John Sexton alongside those of his wife, Anne Larsen,

whose intimate still-life images and delicate photographs of the natural environment share a common luminosity and elegance. Sexton, who worked for photographer Ansel Adams from 1979 to 1984, is best known for his luminous, quiet black-and-white images of nature and is author of four award-winning photographic books. Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

11 a.m. – 8 p.m.

2. UPTOWN

Afterimage GalleryThe Quadrangle #1412800 Routh StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

James Evans: Crazy from the Heat, Photographs of West Texas

10 a.m. – 8 p.m.

David Dike Fine Art2613 Fairmount StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

A collection of works from the early 1920s to mid-century modern. Some of the artists featured in the show include: Deforrest Judd, Charles Umlauf, Alexandre Hogue, Olin Travis, Bill Bomar, and Jerry Bywaters.

2 – 8 p.m.

The McKinney Avenue Contemporary (The MAC)3120 McKinney AvenueDallas, Texas [email protected]

Large Gallery: Lilian Garcia-Roig: Sight-Specific Square Gallery: David Graeve New Works Space: Tony Orrico: Waning Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

11 a.m. – 9 p.m.

Museum of Geometric and MADI Art3109 Carlisle Street at BowenDallas, Texas 75204214.855.7802www.geometricmadimuseum.orginfo@geometricmadimuseum.org

Biennial: Origins in Geometry is a juried competition to recognize excellence in emerging visual artists deriving inspiration from geometric abstraction. Ninety artists entered the 2013 MADI Biennial from as far away as Kuwait, Slovenia, France, England, and Peru.

11 a.m. – 5 p.m.

3. DOWNTOWN

El Centro CollegeH. Paxton Moore Fine Art Gallery801 Main Street1st Floor Technologies Building and Student CenterDallas, Texas 75202214.860.2115www.elcentrocollege.edu/ArtGallery/[email protected]

Stand and Deliver: Fine Art Faculty Exhibi-tion, presenting artwork, along with state-ments on teaching and mentoring, by cur-rent members of the El Centro College Fine Art Faculty. Artists in the exhibition include full-time instructors, program coordinators, and administrators Rosemary Meza-DesPlas, Omar Hernandez, Barbara Armstrong, Eddy Rawlinson, and Randall Garrett, along with the many talented adjunct faculty members, exhibiting artwork in a variety of media.

Noon – 4 p.m.

TVAA Downtown Gallery Plaza of the Americas 700 North Pearl Street, Suite G207 Dallas, Texas 75201469.231.6347tvaa.org/62/exhibitions/rotating- exhibits-at-tvaa-downtown-gallery/ downtown-galler/[email protected]

Eye of Beholder, a group show Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

10 a.m. – 9 p.m.

4. OAK CLIFF

Mountain View CollegeCliff Gallery and Kiva Gallery4849 West Illinois AvenueDallas, Texas 75208214.860.3649www.mountainviewcollege.edu/ Academics/acaddivisions/Ahss/arts/Pages/[email protected]

Closed during Fall Gallery Walk

Oak Cliff Cultural Center223 West Jefferson BoulevardDallas, Texas 75208214.670.3777www.dallasculture.org/OakCliff [email protected]

Austere Measures, a show of ambitious up-and-coming artists who are creating dynamically different kinds of works that go against the grain of the “Dallas” aesthetic.

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

5. DEEP ELLUM/ EXPOSITION PARK/ FAIR PARK

CentralTrak, The University of Texas at Dallas Artists Residency800 Exposition AvenueDallas, Texas 75226214.824.9302 [email protected]

Large scale assemblage by Homecoming! Committee

Noon – 10 p.m.

22. Latino Cultural Center 2600 Live Oak at Good LatimerDallas, Texas 75204214.671.0045www.dallasculture.org/Latino [email protected]

Forging Identity, Creating Local Art: Dallas and North Texas Latino Artists, 1970 to 1993

The Latino Cultural Center opens its 10th Anniversary Season with a retrospective focusing on the voice and pride of local Latino artists from 1970 to 1993. Some of these artists came together in the 1980s to form the Association of Latino Arts and Studies (ALAS). They also worked with local community leaders to advocate for the creation of the Latino Cultural Center. The works of 16 Dallas and North Texas Latino artists will be featured in this exhibition: Celia Alvarez Munoz, Juan Manuel Campos, Filberto Chapa, Jesus Chairez, Pablo Esparza, Lilia Estrada, Eliseo Garcia, Maria Teresa Garcia-Pedroche, John Hernandez, Benito Huerta, Leticia Huerta, Diana Mar-quis, Manuel Mauricio, Vincent Morin, Jesus Moroles, and Jose Vargas.

10 a.m. – 6 p.m.

South Dallas Cultural Center3400 South Fitzhugh Avenue Dallas, Texas 75210 214.939.2787www.dallasculture.org/[email protected]

Spirit Birds, an exhibition of drawings by David Connolly. The work is inspired by the marvelous cycle of life and death: truth, lies, beauty, violence, hope, and redemption. It is a series of diamonds, with fractured and whole imagery living subtly in, and defining the cuts and clarity of the stones. Contagiously Beautiful, an exhibition of photographs by Janice Connolly. This body of work is a narrative intending to reflect the spirit of the subjects in contrast to environ-ment, social status, circumstances, and culture. Connolly chose to use young chil-dren, older women, and young boys from different parts of Kenyan poverty. They are orphans, street children, and wise old souls. Although in most cases the environments were extreme, the spirit of these individu-als moved her to capture that essence of subjects that are contagiously beautiful.

10 a.m. – 4 p.m.

6. EAST DALLAS

Bath House Cultural Center521 East Lawther DriveDallas, Texas 75218214.670.8749www.bathhousecultural.comenrique.fernandez@dallascityhall.com

Curate+Collaborate Exhibition Series presents This Is What I Think, a collaborative exhibition co-curated by Rita Barnard and Jacque Forsher Nature in My Art, an exhibition inspired by nature by mixed media and ceramicist artist Pavlina Panova Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Noon – 8 p.m.

7. RICHARDSON

University of Texas at Dallas Main GalleryVisual Arts Building800 Campbell Road Richardson, Texas 75080 972.883.2787www.utdallas.edu/ah/[email protected]

Collective Bargaining addresses the funda-mental notions of artist collectives — negoti-

ation, camaraderie, and creative expression. Dallas–Fort Worth area artist collectives HOMECOMING! Committee, S.C.A.B. (Socialized Contemporary Artist Bureau), The Ghost Town Arts Collective, Sour Grapes, Muscle Nation, Art Beef, The Junior Ward, and SOLVENT will be represented by a variety of media and performance, with each entity exploring the myriad manifesta-tions of collective behavior—of collective bargaining.

10 a.m. – 10 p.m.

8. PARK CITIES

Meadows Museum at SMU 5900 Bishop Boulevard Dallas, Texas 75205 214.768.2516 [email protected]

The Stewart Album: Art, Letters, and Souve-nirs to an American Patron in Paris American expat William H. Stewart (1820–1897) spent the latter half of his life in Paris amassing an extraordinary art collection and establishing close friendships with some of the most important figures in the art world. This exhibition celebrates the recent acquisi-tion by the Meadows Museum of an album for cartes de visite compiled by Stewart, containing several hundred photographs, drawings, and letters by artists, collectors, aristocrats, and dealers from Europe and the U.S. It sheds light not only on Stewart but also on the lives and careers of key artists in the museum’s collection.

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

Pollock Gallery Meadows School of the Arts Southern Methodist University Hughes-Trigg Student Center 3140 Dyer Street Dallas, Texas 75205 214.768.4439 www.smu.edu/meadows/ AreasOfStudy/Art/[email protected]

Consuming (Interests) features photographs from Taos, New Mexico, by Debora Hunter. As a counterpoint to the romantic images of the northern New Mexican landscape, As-sociate Professor of Art Debora Hunter ad-dresses consumer culture within the context of endangered natural resources.

1 – 5 p.m. Artist talk 1 p.m.

Talley Dunn Gallery 5020 Tracy Street Dallas, Texas 75205 214.521.9898 [email protected]

Susie Rosmarin: New Paintings The artist’s recent paintings feature her celebrated matrices of bright colors and grid structures, abstract constructions that move and pulsate from their very surface. Rosmarin’s process is inspired by fractal geometry and the 13th-century text on nu-merical equations, Diophantus’s Arithmetica. Her work is also inspired by the Op Art movement in the 1960s. For each painting, Rosmarin develops a mathematical formula for the grid and color pattern arrangement. Then each layer of the pattern is painstak-ingly taped, painted, and repeated for each

color until the image is complete. Originally from Brownsville, Texas, Rosmarin now lives and works in Houston. She received a BA from the University of St. Thomas in Houston and completed her MFA at Pratt Institute in New York. Rosmarin has exhib-ited her work extensively throughout Texas and the United States, and her paintings are included in the permanent collections of the Dallas Museum of Art, the McNay Art Museum in San Antonio, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

9. FARMERS BRANCH

Brookhaven College Forum Gallery and Studio Gallery 3939 Valley View Lane Farmers Branch, Texas 75244 972.860.4101 www.brookhavencollege.edu/instruction/bcsa/art/gallery/[email protected]

Forum Gallery: Semographics II— The Philadelphia Portfolio 2010 Sixty large-scale collaborative serigraphs by Timothy High, Stephanie Hunder, Sandra Fernandez, Catherine Kernan, Lynwood Kreneck, Brian Johnson, Kathryn Maxwell, and Hui-Chu Ying Studio Gallery: New drawings by Vance Wingate

1 – 5 p.m.

10. NORTH DALLAS

Norwood Flynn Gallery 3318 Shorecrest Drive Dallas, Texas 75235 214.351.3318 [email protected]

Ray-Mel Cornelius: Inside and Out, a solo show of the painter’s latest work Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Noon – 8 p.m.

Southwest Gallery 4500 Sigma Road Dallas, Texas 75244 972.960.8935 [email protected]

Recent oil paintings by French artist Gerard Valtier Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Artist in attendance 9 a.m. – 6 p.m.

Valley House Gallery & Sculpture Garden 6616 Spring Valley Road Dallas, Texas 75254 972.239.2441 [email protected]

Mark Messersmith Lilian Garcia-Roig

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

11. ARLINGTON

The Gallery at UTA Fine Arts Building 502 South Cooper Street Arlington, Texas 76019 817.272.3110 www.uta.edu/[email protected]

Seattle artists Garth Amundson and Pierre Gour’s collaborative work and Dallas artist Paho Mann’s photographs address individual and collective identity as reflected in what we consume, discard, and recycle. Mann’s images focus on post-consumer waste prior to recycling and random consumer goods otherwise hidden away in kitchen drawers. Guest curated by Bryan Florentin.

Noon – 6 p.m.

12. IRVING

Irving Arts Center Galleries & Sculpture Garden 3333 North MacArthur Boulevard Irving, Texas 75062 972.252.7558 [email protected]

Main Gallery: George Mendoza: Colors of the Wind Carpenter Performance Hall Lobby and Dupree Theater Lobby: Top: Selections from the Tegge Circus Archives Collection

9 a.m. – 5 p.m.

13. DENTON

Texas Woman’s University Department of Visual Arts East | West Galleries Corner of Oakland and Texas Street Denton, Texas 76204 www.twu.edu/[email protected]

Closed during Fall Gallery Walk

UNT Art Galleries Art Building, First Floor 1201 West Mulberry Street Denton, Texas 76201 940.565.4316 [email protected]

Beyond Natural: This group exhibition of eight contemporary artists from around the country highlights artworks that explore the myriad ways artists have shaped—or commented upon—our viewing of our natural world through decoration, fantasy, pattern, artifice, and ornament. Participating artists are Mari Andrews, Karen Rich Beall, Roberley Bell, Gregory Euclide, Amy Gross, Judy Hoffman, Leigh Taylor Mickelson, and Beverly Penn.

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

1. DESIGN DISTRICT

American Fine Art1611 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas 75207214.749.7749www.americanfineart.comartsales@americanfineart.com

Contemporary glass tables by Gini Garcia, who has been active as a glass artist and designer for over 20 years in San Antonio, Texas. She is the first artist to be chosen as a woman of influence in the arts by the San Antonio Business Journal and has received a Citation of honor for contributions to the built environment in the State of Texas by The American Institute of Architects. Garcia’s contemporary glass tables and chandelier will be in the new glass section of American Fine Art.

2– 8 p.m.

Banks Fine Art, LLC1313 Slocum Street, Suite 103Dallas, Texas 75207 [email protected]

ART: Winter, Spring, Summer, Fall, an exhibition of antique oils and works by liv-ing artists of France, Russia, and the U.S. Salon Style, a grouping of paintings with a common theme, including works by Albert Andre, Edouard Leon Cortes, Marcel Dyf, Eugene Galien-Laloue, Francois Gall, Hugo Irureta, Abel Lauvray, Charles Levier, Bill Parker, Pierre Gaston, Jean Rigaud, and Raymond Thibesart. Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Noon – 6 p.m.

Beaux Arts1505 Hi Line DriveDallas, Texas [email protected]

The Figurative Drawings of Arthur Blanchard

Noon – 8 p.m.

Craighead Green Gallery1011 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Group show of Dallas painters Marci Crawford Harnden and Kendall Stallings and Dallas sculptor Marla Ziegler

11 a.m. – 7 p.m.

Dallas Contemporary161 Glass StreetDallas, Texas 75207214.821.2522www.dallascontemporary.orginfo@dallascontemporary.org

New work by Georg Herold, FAILE, Kevin Todora, Kristen Cochran, and Lucia Simek

9 p.m.– midnight

Galerie Züger1215 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas 75207214.749.7713www.galeriezugerdallas.cominfo@galeriezugerdallas.com

Paintings by James Jensen Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Artist in attendance 2 – 8 p.m.

The Goss-Michael Foundation1405 Turtle Creek BoulevardDallas, Texas 75207214.696.0555www.gossmichaelfoundation.orginfo@gossmichaelfoundation.org

Closed during Fall Gallery Walk

Jacques Lamy Art Gallery1607 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Paintings by Marie Claire Pajeile and sculptures by Jason Mehl

2 – 8 p.m.

LuminArte Gallery1727 East Levee StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Colombiarte, a three-part exhibition cel-ebrating Colombian Independence Day that features artworks in a variety of media Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Noon – 10 p.m.

Mary Tomás Gallery1110 Dragon StreetBuilding 1080Dallas, Texas [email protected]

Johannes Boekhoudt— An Artist of Consequence Large paintings in oil, works on paper in charcoal, and mixed media by Latin American artist Johannes Boekhoudt. Boek-houdt’s style utilizes the canvas as a form of communication for social commentary and self-examination. His work has been presented in exhibitions throughout Latin America and the Caribbean.

Noon – 8 p.m. Reception 6 – 8 p.m.

Samuel Lynne Galleries1105 Dragon StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Group exhibition featuring paintings by JD Miller, Philip J. Romano, and Lea Fisher in celebration of the gallery’s 5th anniver-sary. Dallas Love Project painting on exhibi-tion and two film screenings at 2 and 4 p.m. in honor of International Peace Day

11 a.m. – 9 p.m. Reception 6 – 9 p.m.

Sun to Moon Gallery1515 East Levee StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

Show of works by photographer, master printmaker, and educator John Sexton alongside those of his wife, Anne Larsen,

whose intimate still-life images and delicate photographs of the natural environment share a common luminosity and elegance. Sexton, who worked for photographer Ansel Adams from 1979 to 1984, is best known for his luminous, quiet black-and-white images of nature and is author of four award-winning photographic books. Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

11 a.m. – 8 p.m.

2. UPTOWN

Afterimage GalleryThe Quadrangle #1412800 Routh StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

James Evans: Crazy from the Heat, Photographs of West Texas

10 a.m. – 8 p.m.

David Dike Fine Art2613 Fairmount StreetDallas, Texas [email protected]

A collection of works from the early 1920s to mid-century modern. Some of the artists featured in the show include: Deforrest Judd, Charles Umlauf, Alexandre Hogue, Olin Travis, Bill Bomar, and Jerry Bywaters.

2 – 8 p.m.

The McKinney Avenue Contemporary (The MAC)3120 McKinney AvenueDallas, Texas [email protected]

Large Gallery: Lilian Garcia-Roig: Sight-Specific Square Gallery: David Graeve New Works Space: Tony Orrico: Waning Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

11 a.m. – 9 p.m.

Museum of Geometric and MADI Art3109 Carlisle Street at BowenDallas, Texas 75204214.855.7802www.geometricmadimuseum.orginfo@geometricmadimuseum.org

Biennial: Origins in Geometry is a juried competition to recognize excellence in emerging visual artists deriving inspiration from geometric abstraction. Ninety artists entered the 2013 MADI Biennial from as far away as Kuwait, Slovenia, France, England, and Peru.

11 a.m. – 5 p.m.

3. DOWNTOWN

El Centro CollegeH. Paxton Moore Fine Art Gallery801 Main Street1st Floor Technologies Building and Student CenterDallas, Texas 75202214.860.2115www.elcentrocollege.edu/ArtGallery/[email protected]

Stand and Deliver: Fine Art Faculty Exhibi-tion, presenting artwork, along with state-ments on teaching and mentoring, by cur-rent members of the El Centro College Fine Art Faculty. Artists in the exhibition include full-time instructors, program coordinators, and administrators Rosemary Meza-DesPlas, Omar Hernandez, Barbara Armstrong, Eddy Rawlinson, and Randall Garrett, along with the many talented adjunct faculty members, exhibiting artwork in a variety of media.

Noon – 4 p.m.

TVAA Downtown Gallery Plaza of the Americas 700 North Pearl Street, Suite G207 Dallas, Texas 75201469.231.6347tvaa.org/62/exhibitions/rotating- exhibits-at-tvaa-downtown-gallery/ downtown-galler/[email protected]

Eye of Beholder, a group show Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

10 a.m. – 9 p.m.

4. OAK CLIFF

Mountain View CollegeCliff Gallery and Kiva Gallery4849 West Illinois AvenueDallas, Texas 75208214.860.3649www.mountainviewcollege.edu/ Academics/acaddivisions/Ahss/arts/Pages/[email protected]

Closed during Fall Gallery Walk

Oak Cliff Cultural Center223 West Jefferson BoulevardDallas, Texas 75208214.670.3777www.dallasculture.org/OakCliff [email protected]

Austere Measures, a show of ambitious up-and-coming artists who are creating dynamically different kinds of works that go against the grain of the “Dallas” aesthetic.

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

5. DEEP ELLUM/ EXPOSITION PARK/ FAIR PARK

CentralTrak, The University of Texas at Dallas Artists Residency800 Exposition AvenueDallas, Texas 75226214.824.9302 [email protected]

Large scale assemblage by Homecoming! Committee

Noon – 10 p.m.

22. Latino Cultural Center 2600 Live Oak at Good LatimerDallas, Texas 75204214.671.0045www.dallasculture.org/Latino [email protected]

Forging Identity, Creating Local Art: Dallas and North Texas Latino Artists, 1970 to 1993

The Latino Cultural Center opens its 10th Anniversary Season with a retrospective focusing on the voice and pride of local Latino artists from 1970 to 1993. Some of these artists came together in the 1980s to form the Association of Latino Arts and Studies (ALAS). They also worked with local community leaders to advocate for the creation of the Latino Cultural Center. The works of 16 Dallas and North Texas Latino artists will be featured in this exhibition: Celia Alvarez Munoz, Juan Manuel Campos, Filberto Chapa, Jesus Chairez, Pablo Esparza, Lilia Estrada, Eliseo Garcia, Maria Teresa Garcia-Pedroche, John Hernandez, Benito Huerta, Leticia Huerta, Diana Mar-quis, Manuel Mauricio, Vincent Morin, Jesus Moroles, and Jose Vargas.

10 a.m. – 6 p.m.

South Dallas Cultural Center3400 South Fitzhugh Avenue Dallas, Texas 75210 214.939.2787www.dallasculture.org/[email protected]

Spirit Birds, an exhibition of drawings by David Connolly. The work is inspired by the marvelous cycle of life and death: truth, lies, beauty, violence, hope, and redemption. It is a series of diamonds, with fractured and whole imagery living subtly in, and defining the cuts and clarity of the stones. Contagiously Beautiful, an exhibition of photographs by Janice Connolly. This body of work is a narrative intending to reflect the spirit of the subjects in contrast to environ-ment, social status, circumstances, and culture. Connolly chose to use young chil-dren, older women, and young boys from different parts of Kenyan poverty. They are orphans, street children, and wise old souls. Although in most cases the environments were extreme, the spirit of these individu-als moved her to capture that essence of subjects that are contagiously beautiful.

10 a.m. – 4 p.m.

6. EAST DALLAS

Bath House Cultural Center521 East Lawther DriveDallas, Texas 75218214.670.8749www.bathhousecultural.comenrique.fernandez@dallascityhall.com

Curate+Collaborate Exhibition Series presents This Is What I Think, a collaborative exhibition co-curated by Rita Barnard and Jacque Forsher Nature in My Art, an exhibition inspired by nature by mixed media and ceramicist artist Pavlina Panova Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Noon – 8 p.m.

7. RICHARDSON

University of Texas at Dallas Main GalleryVisual Arts Building800 Campbell Road Richardson, Texas 75080 972.883.2787www.utdallas.edu/ah/[email protected]

Collective Bargaining addresses the funda-mental notions of artist collectives — negoti-

ation, camaraderie, and creative expression. Dallas–Fort Worth area artist collectives HOMECOMING! Committee, S.C.A.B. (Socialized Contemporary Artist Bureau), The Ghost Town Arts Collective, Sour Grapes, Muscle Nation, Art Beef, The Junior Ward, and SOLVENT will be represented by a variety of media and performance, with each entity exploring the myriad manifesta-tions of collective behavior—of collective bargaining.

10 a.m. – 10 p.m.

8. PARK CITIES

Meadows Museum at SMU 5900 Bishop Boulevard Dallas, Texas 75205 214.768.2516 [email protected]

The Stewart Album: Art, Letters, and Souve-nirs to an American Patron in Paris American expat William H. Stewart (1820–1897) spent the latter half of his life in Paris amassing an extraordinary art collection and establishing close friendships with some of the most important figures in the art world. This exhibition celebrates the recent acquisi-tion by the Meadows Museum of an album for cartes de visite compiled by Stewart, containing several hundred photographs, drawings, and letters by artists, collectors, aristocrats, and dealers from Europe and the U.S. It sheds light not only on Stewart but also on the lives and careers of key artists in the museum’s collection.

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

Pollock Gallery Meadows School of the Arts Southern Methodist University Hughes-Trigg Student Center 3140 Dyer Street Dallas, Texas 75205 214.768.4439 www.smu.edu/meadows/ AreasOfStudy/Art/[email protected]

Consuming (Interests) features photographs from Taos, New Mexico, by Debora Hunter. As a counterpoint to the romantic images of the northern New Mexican landscape, As-sociate Professor of Art Debora Hunter ad-dresses consumer culture within the context of endangered natural resources.

1 – 5 p.m. Artist talk 1 p.m.

Talley Dunn Gallery 5020 Tracy Street Dallas, Texas 75205 214.521.9898 [email protected]

Susie Rosmarin: New Paintings The artist’s recent paintings feature her celebrated matrices of bright colors and grid structures, abstract constructions that move and pulsate from their very surface. Rosmarin’s process is inspired by fractal geometry and the 13th-century text on nu-merical equations, Diophantus’s Arithmetica. Her work is also inspired by the Op Art movement in the 1960s. For each painting, Rosmarin develops a mathematical formula for the grid and color pattern arrangement. Then each layer of the pattern is painstak-ingly taped, painted, and repeated for each

color until the image is complete. Originally from Brownsville, Texas, Rosmarin now lives and works in Houston. She received a BA from the University of St. Thomas in Houston and completed her MFA at Pratt Institute in New York. Rosmarin has exhib-ited her work extensively throughout Texas and the United States, and her paintings are included in the permanent collections of the Dallas Museum of Art, the McNay Art Museum in San Antonio, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

9. FARMERS BRANCH

Brookhaven College Forum Gallery and Studio Gallery 3939 Valley View Lane Farmers Branch, Texas 75244 972.860.4101 www.brookhavencollege.edu/instruction/bcsa/art/gallery/[email protected]

Forum Gallery: Semographics II— The Philadelphia Portfolio 2010 Sixty large-scale collaborative serigraphs by Timothy High, Stephanie Hunder, Sandra Fernandez, Catherine Kernan, Lynwood Kreneck, Brian Johnson, Kathryn Maxwell, and Hui-Chu Ying Studio Gallery: New drawings by Vance Wingate

1 – 5 p.m.

10. NORTH DALLAS

Norwood Flynn Gallery 3318 Shorecrest Drive Dallas, Texas 75235 214.351.3318 [email protected]

Ray-Mel Cornelius: Inside and Out, a solo show of the painter’s latest work Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Noon – 8 p.m.

Southwest Gallery 4500 Sigma Road Dallas, Texas 75244 972.960.8935 [email protected]

Recent oil paintings by French artist Gerard Valtier Dallas Love Project painting on exhibition

Artist in attendance 9 a.m. – 6 p.m.

Valley House Gallery & Sculpture Garden 6616 Spring Valley Road Dallas, Texas 75254 972.239.2441 [email protected]

Mark Messersmith Lilian Garcia-Roig

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

11. ARLINGTON

The Gallery at UTA Fine Arts Building 502 South Cooper Street Arlington, Texas 76019 817.272.3110 www.uta.edu/[email protected]

Seattle artists Garth Amundson and Pierre Gour’s collaborative work and Dallas artist Paho Mann’s photographs address individual and collective identity as reflected in what we consume, discard, and recycle. Mann’s images focus on post-consumer waste prior to recycling and random consumer goods otherwise hidden away in kitchen drawers. Guest curated by Bryan Florentin.

Noon – 6 p.m.

12. IRVING

Irving Arts Center Galleries & Sculpture Garden 3333 North MacArthur Boulevard Irving, Texas 75062 972.252.7558 [email protected]

Main Gallery: George Mendoza: Colors of the Wind Carpenter Performance Hall Lobby and Dupree Theater Lobby: Top: Selections from the Tegge Circus Archives Collection

9 a.m. – 5 p.m.

13. DENTON

Texas Woman’s University Department of Visual Arts East | West Galleries Corner of Oakland and Texas Street Denton, Texas 76204 www.twu.edu/[email protected]

Closed during Fall Gallery Walk

UNT Art Galleries Art Building, First Floor 1201 West Mulberry Street Denton, Texas 76201 940.565.4316 [email protected]

Beyond Natural: This group exhibition of eight contemporary artists from around the country highlights artworks that explore the myriad ways artists have shaped—or commented upon—our viewing of our natural world through decoration, fantasy, pattern, artifice, and ornament. Participating artists are Mari Andrews, Karen Rich Beall, Roberley Bell, Gregory Euclide, Amy Gross, Judy Hoffman, Leigh Taylor Mickelson, and Beverly Penn.

10 a.m. – 5 p.m.

DADA and Deep Ellum Community Association Join ForcesFor Fall Gallery Walk September 17 AND 21, 2013

Including Bike Swarm, DADA Docents, Dallas Love Project

In honor of International Peace Day, the Dallas Art Dealers Association and

Deep Ellum Community Association are joining forces for Fall Gallery Walk

on Saturday, September 21, 2013, featuring thirty-five of DADA’s leading

member galleries, museums, and nonprofit art spaces as well as 14 galler-

ies in Deep Ellum. The event includes DADA Docents providing informa-

tion at selected art spaces, and the DADA Bike Swarm bringing together

the Bike Friendly groups from Oak Cliff, Design District, Deep Ellum, and

The Cedars. Paintings from the Dallas Love Project are also on display at

select member galleries. Two films in honor of International Peace Day

will be screened at Samuel Lynne Galleries. DADA’s Fall Panel Discussion,

“Embracing Latin American Art,” will be Tuesday, September 17, at 7 p.m. at

Cathedral Guadalupe. For more information, visit dallasartdealers.org or call

214.914.1099. Media Sponsors are Patron Magazine and moderndallas.net.

Tuesday, September 17, 7–8:30 p.m. DADA Fall Panel Discussion

EMBRACING LATIN AMERICAN ART

At Cathedral Guadalupe, 2215 Ross Avenue. Catherine Cuellar is the

moderator. Panelists include Tomas Bustos, Johannes Boekhoudt, Guillermo

Cardenas, Viola Delgado, and Benjamin Lima. Tickets are available at

dallasartdealers.org for $10 in advance or $15 at the door. The event ben-

efits the Edith Baker Art Scholarship and Artist Career Development Fund.

DADA is pleased to partner with the Creative Arts Center and the Latino

Cultural Center for these panels, with funding provided by the City of

Dallas Office of Cultural Affairs and the Texas Commission on the Arts.

Saturday, September 21, noon–8 p.m. DADA Fall Gallery Walk, in collaboration with Deep Ellum Community Association, Dallas Love Project, and International Peace Day

Art lovers of every description will have the opportunity to socialize and

tour a full spectrum of galleries and special exhibitions all in one day. Start

at any member location and pick up a map or print one out online at dal-

lasartdealers.org. Hours at each gallery vary; please see individual listings.

For more information, call 214.914.1099 or e-mail info@dallasartdealers.

org. Paintings from the Dallas Love Project will be at select DADA galleries.

Two films celebrating International Peace Day will be screened at 2 p.m.

and 4 p.m. at Samuel Lynne Galleries.

Saturday, September 21, noon–8 p.m. / DADA Docents Program

High school students serve as exhibition hosts at select DADA galleries.

Training is open to all high school students on Saturday, September 7,

10:30 a.m., at The MAC, 3120 McKinney Avenue. RSVP at

[email protected].

Saturday, September 21, 9 p.m.-midnight DADA Fall Gallery Walk After Party

Enjoy late night art at Dallas Contemporary, 161 Glass Street.

Saturday, September 21, 11 a.m.–5 p.m. / DADA Bike Swarm In honor of International Peace Day, several Bike Friendly groups will come together to ride in DADA’s Bike Swarm. Cyclists of all age levels and abilities are invited. Bike Friendly Oak Cliff, Bike Friendly Cedars, Bike Friendly Design District, and Bike Friendly Deep Ellum will work together to cover the neighborhoods of Oak Cliff, Deep Ellum, and the Design District. Bike Swarm is part of the DADA Fall Gallery Walk on Saturday, September 21. Riders can start at any of the following stops: 11 a.m. Meet at Oak Cliff Cultural Center, 223 West Jefferson Boulevard (for a ride from Oak Cliff to Deep Ellum for lunch at Burger Fest and a visit to area galleries); 2 p.m. Meet at Kettle Art Gallery, 2650B Main Street (ride from Deep Ellum to Design District for a visit to area galleries); 3 p.m. Meet at Meddlesome Moth, 1621 Oak Lawn Avenue (ride from here for tour of Design District); 5 p.m. riders will return to their home bases in Oak Cliff, Deep Ellum, or The Cedars. The event is FREE and includes a self-guided tour of the art galleries located in the Design District as well as galleries in Deep Ellum. Visit www.facebook.com/events/633281223363372/ to register for the event.

www.facebook.com/dallasartdealersassociation twitter.com/DADA25th www.dallasartdealers.org

About DADA

The Dallas Art Dealers Association is an affilia-

tion of established independent gallery owners

and nonprofit art organizations in the Dallas

metropolitan area. It is a professional and

educational resource for the community at large.

Members of the DADA Art Dealers Association

have an established reputation for honesty,

integrity, and professionalism among their peers,

and must make a substantial contribution to the

cultural life of the community by offering works

of high aesthetic quality and presenting worth-

while exhibitions. DADA is dedicated to promot-

ing the highest standards of ethical practice within

the profession and to increasing public awareness

of the role and responsibilities of reputable art

dealers and nonprofit visual art spaces.

About the Edith Baker Art Scholarship

and Artist Career Development Fund

To celebrate its 20th anniversary in 2005, DADA

created a scholarship honoring a respected

member of the Dallas art community and one of

its founding members, Edith Baker. Edith owned

and directed The Edith Baker Gallery in Dallas

for nearly thirty years before retiring in 2004.

Every year, the Edith Baker Art Scholarship and

Artist Career Development Fund, a 501(c)(3),

financially benefits a student pursuing the study

of visual arts along with giving that student a

gallery internship, a mentor, and an artist studio

visit. The scholarship also presents a career fair

at Booker T. Washington High School for the

Performing and Visual Arts, two juried exhibi-

tions of Booker T and Dallas County Community

College students’ artwork, a docent-training

program, biannual educational events, and Art

Chicas and Art Chicos at La Reunion TX.

About Creative Arts Center

Creative Arts Center of Dallas (CAC) provides

a nurturing environment for people to discover,

develop, and express their artistic visions.

Located on a two-acre campus four miles east

of downtown Dallas, CAC offers more than

five hundred classes and workshops per year

in such disciplines as ceramics, clay sculpture,

drawing, glass, jewelry, metal arts, mosaic, paint-

ing, photography, printmaking, and stone

carving. CAC also offers free arts programming

to disadvantaged children. Not only a visual arts

school, CAC is also a thriving arts community for

a diverse range of students from teens to seniors.

Visit CAC at 2360 Laughlin Drive in East Dallas

or creativeartscenter.org.

About Deep Ellum Community Association

Deep Ellum Community Association’s mission

is to promote, preserve, and protect Deep Ellum

as a diverse urban, sustainable walking neighbor-

hood built on a culture of organic, independent

creativity. For more information about DECA,

please visit deepellumtexas.com or e-mail

[email protected].

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Visit www.dallasartdealers.org for additional maps.

Dallas Art Dealers Association presents

Get on your bike and ride to celebrate

International Peace Day September 21