The Texas Biennial lands in San Antonio with a program exploring race, immigration and activism
By Bryan Rindfuss
Aug 10, 2021
Tags: San Antonio , Texas , art , contemporary art , Texas Biennial , Ruby City , McNay Art Museum , San Antonio Museum of Art , SAMA , Ariel René Jackson , JooYoung Choi , Steve Parker , Phillip Pyle II , Ja’Tovia Gary , Donald Moffett , Colby Deal , Evan Garza , Ryan N. Dennis , FotoFest , Houston , Ssilver Street Studios , San Antonio Museum of Art , The Giverny Suite , Meesh , Autumn Knight , Max Fields , In Place of an Index , Abhidnya Ghuge , José Villalobos , Vincent Valdez , Mich Stevenson , Yellowjacket No. 3 , The next life of property , Studio at Ruby City , John Gerrard , Filipinx Artists of Houston , Adriana Corral , He Kills Me , activism , human rights , Artpace , Kaneem Smith , Alisha B. Wormsley , There Are Black People in the Future , Texas artists , San Antonio artists , racial justice , social justice , border and immigrant justice , art exhibition , A New Landscape , A Possible Horizon , Rigoberto Luna , Shea Little , Leslie Moody Castro , Big Medium , Rachel Koper , Jon Lawrence , Arturo Palacios , Joseph Phillips , Jana Swec , Cover Story