Made in Texas

Charisse Perlina Weston, hairline fractures along the soft bending of truth (cassé), 2019. Hot folded glass, fused broken glass, etched text, high-fire enamel, panel 1: 15 x 20 inches; concrete blocks: 8 x 8 x 5 inches (Belgrade retaining wall block, each) and 2 x 12 x 8 inches (Belgard Tan Concrete Retaining Wall Cap, each). Courtesy of the artist, Jack Shainman Gallery, New York and Patron Gallery, Chicago © Charisse Pearlina Weston

Participating artists

Diedrick Brackens

Adriana Corral

Jamal Cyrus

Nathaniel Donnett

Rahim Fortune

Ja’Tovia Gary

Oshay Green

Jaylon Israel Hicks

Robert Hodge

Sedrick Huckaby

Jaylen Pigford

Robert Pruitt

Deborah Roberts

Anthony Suber

José Villalobos

Charisse Pearlina Weston

About the exhibition

Made in Texas invites audiences to encounter the state as a complex cultural force whose political and social conditions quietly shape and sometimes limit the possibilities of liberty, care, and collective belonging. This exhibition situates Texas within local and global conversations about regionalism, climate urgency, labor economies, and the politics of visibility. Through material inquiry and conceptual experimentation, the participating artists—each Texas-born—probe how life in Texas, and ultimately one’s identity, is shaped by infrastructure, migration, industry, and memory. Artists such as Ja’Tovia Gary, Robert Hodge, Deborah Roberts, José Villalobos, and Charisse Weston bring distinct practices that engage questions of representation, history, and place, expanding how Texas can be seen and understood through contemporary art. 

 Rather than presenting fixed narratives, the works in this exhibition open space for dialogue between rural and urban experience, inherited tradition and speculative futures, intimacy and monumentality. Viewers will find paintings, works on paper, sculpture, and sound elements that use regional materials and histories to interrogate systems of power while cultivating forms of care, adaptation, and resistance. By reframing Texas as a site of intellectual and creative production, the exhibition draws attention to the capacity of contemporary art to contest assumptions, foster connection, and articulate possibilities emerging from within the region itself. 

Curated by Phillip A. Townsend, Curator of Art

Affiliated programming

September 3, 2026 5:30 - 7:30 PM: Opening Reception

Addtional programming to be announced.

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Carrie Mae Weems: Something Grander Still