It presented an amazing collection of works that purposefully defied preconceptions, as it explored Latin American art from 1920 to 1970. 'Inverted Utopias: Avant-Garde Art in Latin America' at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston was the first United States exhibition to explore the subject. The crowd is incredibly laid-back and cool, and while bears in harnesses abound, people of all genders and orientations are welcome. BUDDYS 23 reviews Karaoke, Gay Bars Montrose, Fourth Ward 2409 Grant St, Ste A Houston, TX It was a perfectly delightful post-COViD experience. Since 1982, Ripcord has been a fixture of Houston’s LGBTQ+ bar scene and THE gay leather bar in Houston where the wild, the weird, and the kinky gather on a nightly basis.
But Latin America has long been home to a diverse and thriving art scene - with artists that were often more avant-garde than their U.S. Gay Bars in Houston Showing 1-16 of 16 1. In the United States our conceptions of Latin American art often involve some sort of vague stereotype (usually involving folk art or painters such as Frida Kahlo or Diego Rivera). And in the late '60s, Brazilian Lygia Clark created interactive works that employed brightly colored hoods to control participants' senses: Vision was obscured, sachets of spices over the nose provided olfactory sensation, and shell-like earpieces created the roar of the ocean. 'Inverted Utopias: Avant-Garde Art in Latin America' In 1965, Venezuelan artist Carlos Cruz-Diez constructed an amazing light-based installation - pre-James Turrell and Dan Flavin.