Tag Archives: Moody Center for the Arts

Radiant Geometries Exhibition: Vectors of Knowledge from Indigenous Americas 

Moody Center for the Arts at Rice University  Announces for Fall 2026
On view September 4 to December 19, 2026, this ambitious group exhibition explores Indigenous knowledge systems and their longstanding relationship with math, science, and technology in the Americas.Eamon Ore-Giron, Black Medallion XIV (Inti), 2022. Mineral paint and flashe on linen, 198 x 258 in. © Eamon Ore-Giron 2022. Courtesy of the artist and James Cohan, New York. Photo: Charles White. 

July, 2026 (Houston, Texas) — Through a framing of North, Central, and South America as interconnected regions, Radiant Geometries: Vectors of Knowledge from the Indigenous Americas brings together contemporary Indigenous and Latin American artists whose practices illuminate knowledge as a living technology, through which the mathematical, metaphysical, and artistic realms converge. At a moment when the social and environmental consequences of technological advancement are prompting global debate, this selection of works—among them paintings, sculptures, textiles, video works, and site-specific commissions—conveys relational teachings rooted in the Americas.

Opening September 4, 2026, the exhibition features national and international artists, including Nanibah Chacon, Melissa Cody, Jordan Ann Craig, Patricia Domínguez, Sara Flores, Natalia Montoya Lecaros, Patrick Martinez, Cisco Merel, Caroline Monnet, and Eamon Ore-Giron, among others. 

  “At its core, Radiant Geometries centers Indigenous ways of knowing that continue to shape relationships to territories, waterways, and interspecies care,” said Noor Alé, Moody Center for the Arts Associate Curator. “By reconsidering the histories of mathematics, architecture, and science through Indigenous perspectives, the exhibition invites viewers to consider the enduring connections between cosmology, technology, and the living world.” Patricia Domínguez, Matrix Vegetal, 2021-22. Video 4K, 21:12 min. Commissioned by Screen City Biennial, with the support of Cecilia Brunson Projects and Galería Patricia Ready.

 Set on the campus of a leading research university, the Moody’s presentation includes artists whose works evoke the symbiotic relationship between art, math, technology, and science, often through the language of abstraction. Among them, Sara Flores’s paintings foreground the interdependence of all life forms and call attention to interspecies care; Patrick Martinez’s painted sculpture, inspired by the pre-Columbian murals of Cacaxtla, positions Indigenous architecture as sites of material knowledge and urban intelligence; Natalia Montoya Lecaros’s totemic sculptures draw on an Aymara ceremonial dance that honors agricultural cycles; Caroline Monnet’s Styrofoam installation etched with Anishinaabe iconography, reconsiders colonial legacies in architecture; Patricia Domínguez’s videos explore astronomy and plant intelligence to bridge spiritual and scientific divides; Cisco Merel’s totemic work references protective sigils found in Guna textile traditions; and Melissa Cody’s jacquard tapestry fuses Navajo textile traditions with computational aesthetics.  

In addition, newly commissioned works extend the visibility of knowledge as an evolving technology, illuminating its transmission across generations while continuously responding to the future. These works include an interactive sound installation with Diné designs from Nanibah Chacon; installation and paintings by Jordan Ann Craig that explore Cheyenne beadwork and parfleche designs drawn from museum collections in Texas and Colorado; and new paintings from Eamon Ore-Giron inspired by Maya ceramics in Rice University’s collection.  Sara Flores, Untitled (Shao Maya Punté Kené 1, 2022), 2022. Vegetal dyes on wild-cotton canvas, 59 x 122 3/8 in. Private Collection of Timothy C. Headington. Courtesy of the artist and The Shipibo Conibo Center. Photo © JSP Art Photography.  

“Through this compelling selection of works and complementary programming, we’re able to achieve the Moody’s mission to synthesize Rice’s academic resources and artists’ creative insight into meaningful connections and critical dialogue,” said Joel Thompson, Moody Center for the Arts Deputy Director.  Featured artists include Nanibah Chacon (Diné/Chicana) (b. 1980 in Gallup, New Mexico; lives in Albuquerque, New Mexico), Melissa Cody (Navajo/Diné) (b. 1983 in No Water Mesa, Arizona; lives in Long Beach, California), Jordan Ann Craig (Northern Cheyenne) (b. 1992 in San Jose, California; lives in Santa Fe, New Mexico), Patricia Domínguez (b. 1984 in Santiago de Chile; lives in Puchuncaví, Chile), Sara Flores (Shipibo-Konibo) (b. 1950 in Tambomayo, Peru; lives in Yarinacocha, Peru), Natalia Montoya Lecaros (Aymara) (b. 1994 in Iquique, Chile; lives in Santiago de Chile), Patrick Martinez (b. 1980 in Pasadena, California; lives in Los Angeles), Cisco Merel (b. 1981 in Panama City; lives in Panama City), Caroline Monnet (Anishinaabe/French) (b. 1985 in Ottawa, Canada; lives in Montreal), and Eamon Ore-Giron (b. 1973 in Tucson, Arizona; lives in Los Angeles), among others.    

The exhibition is curated by Noor Alé, Associate Curator. Graphic design is by Sébastien Aubin.    Radiant Geometries: Vectors of Knowledge from the Indigenous Americas is made possible by the Libbie Rice Shearn Moody Fund for the Arts and the Thomas D. and Pamela Riley Smith Endowment for the Moody Center for the Arts. Major support is provided by the City of Houston through the Houston Arts Alliance, the Elizabeth Lee Moody Excellence Fund, the H. Russell Pitman Fund for the Moody Center for the Arts, and the Moody Center for the Arts Founders Circle.     Special ProgrammingNatalia Montoya Lecaros, Tótems de emergencia, 2021. Series of modular MDF sculptures, with tempera paint, acrylic yarn, beads, lined cardboard, and bird feathers, 37 x 33 x 28 in. Courtesy of the artist and Judas Galería. 

For The Silo, Erin Rolfs.

Featured image– ORE-GIRON_Talking Shit with Macha’acuay, the Serpent of the Milky Way_2025_credit-Charles White

Rice University Upcoming- Masako Miki: Shapeshifters, Sprites, and Spirits

April, 2026 (Houston, Texas) — The Moody Center for the Arts at Rice University announces that its summer 2026 exhibition will feature the work of Masako Miki (b. 1973, Osaka, Japan). The artist’s first solo show in Texas, this site-specific, sculptural installation is populated with spirits, shapeshifters, and other changelings animated by a longing for recognition and connection amid a rapidly changing world.

The Influence Of Surrealism And Japanese Folklore

Rendered through Miki’s vibrant visual language in a style informed by twentieth-century art historical movements, including European Surrealism and Japanese manga, this exhibition interprets themes from Japanese folklore and brings them into relation with the present, reflecting the artist’s interest in storytelling and myth as forces that shape how the world is understood.

 “The empathetic throughline of Miki’s work draws visitors together into a space that is both entirely original and deeply familiar,” said Alison Weaver, co-curator and Suzanne Deal Booth Executive Director for the Moody Center for the Arts. “Amid global conflict and widening cultural divides, in the year following the eightieth anniversary of the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, this exhibition offers a bridge across time and tradition to demonstrate how shared narratives can foster connections across seemingly insurmountable differences.”   

Central to Miki’s practice, and to the folkloric traditions from which it draws, is the belief that all beings and things contain a spirit.

Specifically, the influence of Shinto animism informs Miki’s sculptures of everyday objects and natural elements—gourds, dolls, trees, and others—that assume human scale and a vivid sense of character. Constructed from felt layered over wood armatures, Miki’s creatures form abstract silhouettes that feel both natural and fantastical. Questions that inform Miki’s approach include: Why do some stories live on for generations while others are forgotten? And how do strangers relate to one another despite cultural and political divides?

According To The Artist

According to the artist, “[These] mythologies have the potential to counter past narratives such as the legacy of World War II in Japan and the history of slavery in the United States. My characters are ordinary but have extraordinary powers; they are secular but are attuned to sacred traditions. As a collective, they advocate for both individual and collective agency, and the importance of stories as unifying systems in today’s complex world.” This exhibition is curated by Associate Curator Claudia Mattos with Suzanne Deal Booth Executive Director Alison Weaver. 

Masako Miki: Shapeshifters, Sprites, and Spirits is made possible by the City of Houston through the Houston Arts Alliance, the Moody Center for the Arts Excellence Fund, the H. Russell Pitman Fund for the Moody Center for the Arts, the Tamara de Kuffner Fund, the Kilgore Endowment Fund, and the Sewell Endowment.

More About the ExhibitionMasako Miki, Blissful One-Eyed Spirit, Courtesy of the artist and Jessica Silverman. Photo: Steve Ferrara

Bringing mythic and mundane worlds into contact, Masako Miki focuses her Moody presentation on yōkai—supernatural entities taking the form of beings, objects, and apparitions—particularly those that appear in the Night Parade of One Hundred Demons (Hyakki Yagyō), a legend dating to medieval Japan. In this tale, discarded household objects, from a monk’s string of prayer beads to abandoned umbrellas, come to life and gather in an unruly procession, making themselves known to a world that has failed to recognize their presence. 

Forms That Go Overlooked

“By attuning viewers to forms of life that often go overlooked, Miki raises questions about belonging, resilience, and who—or what—has been cast aside or forgotten,” said Claudia Mattos, co-curator and Associate Curator for the Moody Center for the Arts. “

Mindfully arranged in our gallery, each grouping suggests companionship, conspiracy, or collectivity, allowing sculptures to assert a presence in relation to the space, the viewer, and one another.” In tandem with the exhibition, the Moody will screen episodes of GeGeGe no Kitarō, a Japanese animated series based on a manga created in 1960 by artist Shigeru Mizuki (1922–2015), a World War II veteran whose work was shaped by his experiences of war.

Credited with reviving interest in Japanese yōkai in twentieth-century popular culture, the story follows a childlike yōkai named Kitarō who moves between human and supernatural realms and intervenes when conflict arises between them. The episodes were influential to Miki’s development growing up, and their contemporary reimagining of folklore resonates with themes that shape her practice today. Masako Miki: Shapeshifters, Sprites, and Spirits invites visitors to imagine how traditional stories can speak to contemporary sociopolitical realities. The exhibition makes the case that expressions of joy and the human imagination are radical acts with the potential to disrupt prevailing cultural discourse to imagine a more compassionate, harmonious, humane future. 

Moody Center for the Arts at Rice University Announces Summer 2026 Exhibition Masako Miki: Shapeshifters, Sprites, and Spirits
On view May 29 – August 15, 2026, Masako Miki’s first solo show in Texas brings folklore into a present-day focusMasako Miki, Waiting Cloud, 2025. Photo by Chris Gunder

Masako Miki, Rising Pink Prayer Beads, Courtesy of the artist and Jessica Silverman. Photo: Phillip Maisel About the ArtistMasako Miki. Courtesy of the artist and Jessica Silverman. Photo: Francis Baker.

Masako Miki (b. 1973, Osaka, Japan) holds an MFA from San José State University, CA, and a BFA from Notre Dame de Namur University, Belmont, CA. Her work has been the subject of solo exhibitions at the Institute of Contemporary Art, San Francisco; de Young Museum, San Francisco; Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Boston; Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, CA; ICA San José, CA; and KMAC Contemporary Art Museum, Louisville, KY. Her work is in the permanent collections of SFMOMA; BAMPFA; the McEvoy Foundation for the Arts, CA; Collección SOLO, Madrid; Byrd Hoffman Water Mill Foundation, New York; and Tweed Museum of Art, Duluth, MN, among others. Miki lives and works in Berkeley, CA.
Masako Miki, Pine Tree from Ancient Time, Courtesy of the artist and Jessica Silverman. Photo: Steve Ferrara

For the Silo, Jarrod Barker.