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Community Gallery

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ON VIEW /September 28, 2024–January 26, 2025

Proposal for a 28th Amendment? Is it Possible to Amend an Unequal System? 

 

Houston, we want to hear from you!

Proposal for a 28th Amendment? Is it Possible to Amend an Unequal System? is a participatory installation by artists Tali Keren & Alex Strada that critically examines the U.S. Constitution. Central to the work is an oral archive you can hear through sonic soapbox sculptures on view at Project Row Houses. Please contribute to this growing soundtrack by recording your response to the project’s questions: What 28th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution would you add? Do you think it is possible to amend an unequal system?
<To participate, follow these steps:
  1. Open a voice recording app on your phone. (Watch a video to learn how to record voice notes on Apple and Android.)
  2. Speaking into the microphone on your phone, introduce yourself in any way you’d like. Your response can be in any language and any length you choose.
  3. Respond to the project’s questions:
What 28th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution would you propose? How would this amendment impact your life? 
Do you think it is possible to amend a system that from its founding is inherently unequal?
When you’re satisfied with your recording and are ready to submit it, please email it to 28th@projectrowhouses.org. Your voice will be added to the exhibition soapboxes in approximately two weeks. 
By recording yourself you’re agreeing to become part of this exhibition. Thank you for adding your voice to this evolving oral archive!
 

Artist Rounds are a biannual event, with openings in March and October.  Each installation lasts approximately four months. During the Round, seven row houses are open to visiting artists to display works that address a topic, question, or challenge facing the community. Contributors include both individual artists and art collectives. Rounds are curated by PRH often in collaboration with guest curators. Danielle Burns Wilson is the current Curator & Art Director at PRH.

When a round is installed, the art houses are open to the public Wednesday – Sunday from noon to 5pm.

2020–
present

The pain and uncertainty in our country, from COVID-19 to social unrest, is undeniable. We are struggling and a reckoning happening in the country. Art is an integral part of redirecting that struggle…

2019–
2010

Though creative resistance is nothing new, contemporary artists and activists have built upon the longstanding legacy of cultural organizing and social movement…

2009–
2000

Social practice brings together a group of artists deeply engaged in collaborative practices that speak to social issues related to identity, politics, activism. “Social practice” emerged from academia to…

1999–
1993

Since its founding in 1993, PRH has sought to engage artists in a process that connects them directly with residents, neighborhood institutions, and the environment of a low-income neighborhood…

Artist
Studios

PRH offers a plethora of opportunities to artists, but one of the things that artists need most is space – a space to work and allow their ideas to take shape. Affordable studio space can be a rarity in many cities, and we are proud to have the studios on campus available to artists from our community. Our current studio artists include Rabéa Ballin, Brian Ellison, and Anthony Suber.

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Community Gallery

Located in the main building, the community gallery is a space to showcase exhibitions by emerging artists living and working in Houston. The gallery space is not only patrons first introduction to Project Row Houses but also a space where people gather. 
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In Marginalized Communities.