Please turn JavaScript on
header-image

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft

Subscribe to Houston Center for Contemporary Craft’s news feed.

Click on “Follow” and decide if you want to get news from Houston Center for Contemporary Craft via RSS, as email newsletter, via mobile or on your personal news page.

Subscription to Houston Center for Contemporary Craft comes without risk as you can unsubscribe instantly at any time.

You can also filter the feed to your needs via topics and keywords so that you only receive the news from Houston Center for Contemporary Craft which you are really interested in. Click on the blue “Filter” button below to get started.

Website title: Houston Center for Contemporary Craft – Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) is a nonprofit arts organization founded to advance education about the process, product and history of craft. HCCC’s major emphasis is on objects of art made primarily from craft materials: clay, fiber, glass, metal, wood or found/recycled materials.

Is this your feed? Claim it!

Publisher:  Unclaimed!
Message frequency:  0 / day

Message History

The Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) has announced the Award of Merit winners from its CraftTexas 2025 exhibition.
by Nicholas Frank

Juror Abraham Thomas selected Annie Arnold of Austin, Naomi Choi of Houston, and Naomi Wanjiku of San Antonio ...


Read full story

by Joseph Staley

CraftTexas, the long-running annual show, juried this year by Abraham Thomas, Curator of Modern Architecture, Design, and Decorative Arts  at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, draws 50 pieces by 49 artists from more than 350 submissions. The selecti...


Read full story

Dispatch from the 1st Edition of Untitled Art in Texas
by Elodie Saint-Louis

Earlie Hudnall. “Gucci Brothers” (1990).

A sense of optimism—a rare feeling these days—hung in the air at the inaugural edition of


Read full story

Here, Houston proves it can rival any coastal capital in taste and risk-taking, with five collections that will stop you in your tracks.
by Karly Quadros

Everything is bigger in Texas, including the collections. Sam Gilliam hangs beside


Read full story

by Lisa Wong Macabasco

The Dan Flavin installation at the Menil Collection. Photo: Sarah Hobson

Houston’s arts scene has never been louder, brighter, or more alive—and this week, it takes center stage with the arrival of the first


Read full story