This is a past event.

"A Village Dreams"

A Village Dreams: Paintings by Jose Guadalupe Guadiana, curated by Kent Rush, represents a small selection of the most intriguing, compelling, and beautiful of the late artist’s paintings. Modest in scale, they represent Guadiana’s change in style—a unique, subtle, and compelling body of colorful, folk-figurative work—recounting compelling and endearing stories of the inhabitants of a village lost in the rapture of their dreams. The type of theme fits into the realm of Latin American Magical Realism, yet is authentic, sincere and expressive—a style that is his alone—a true gift left to us by the artist.

  • Terminal 136

    136 Blue Star, San Antonio Southtown

    (210) 458-4391

    10 articles
  • or

Join SA Current Newsletters

Subscribe now to get the latest news delivered right to your inbox.

Everything we saw as Interpol brought its moody sounds to San Antonio's Boeing Center

Post-punk revivalists Interpol treated fans at Boeing Center at Tech Port to a riveting set of brooding but beautiful music built around…

By San Antonio Current Staff

Everything we saw as Interpol brought its moody sounds to San Antonio's Boeing Center
74 slides

This San Antonio-area home for sale has cliffside access to the Guadalupe River

A spacious Spring Branch home perched on a bluff above the Guadalupe River has hit the market for $1.1 million. Built in…

By San Antonio Current Staff

This San Antonio-area home for sale has cliffside access to the Guadalupe River
39 slides

The San Antonio Conservation Society just slashed the price on its King William headquarters by $500K

The San Antonio Conservation Society is trying to sell the Anton Wulff house, the stately King William Historical District home that's served…

By San Antonio Current Staff

The San Antonio Conservation Society just slashed the price on its King William headquarters by $500K
25 slides

20 beloved, wild and weird San Antonio landmarks that no longer exist

For many years, San Antonio seemed to change at a slower pace than other big Texas cities. That's no longer the case.…

By San Antonio Current Staff

Earl Abel's
Located at Broadway and Hildebrand, this iconic San Antonio restaurant was enjoyed by generations for its fried chicken, pies, breakfasts and other comfort food. It opened in 1933 but was displaced in 2006 by the construction of a luxury condo tower. New owners kept the SA favorite going in two new locations but finally threw in the towel last year due to post-pandemic pressures. 

Photo via UTSA Libraries Digital Collections
20 slides