PaperCity Magazine

February 2019- Houston

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H U N T E R S C R E E K | P R I C E U P O N R E Q U E S T OBSESSIONS. DECORATION. SALIENT FACTS. 18 Dallas restaurateur Shannon Wynne, owner of Rodeo Goat and The Flying Saucer, is at it again with Flying Fish. You can find all things fried, alongside gumbo and po' boys, at 1815 North Durham. Come for the gumbo, stay for the novelty wall of Big Mouth Billy Bass … Pearland favorite Ronnie Killen brings all-new flair with Killen's TMX at 9330 West Broadway in Pearland. It's all about Tex-Mex barbecue fusion, with Wagyu beef fajitas, pecan-smoked barbacoa short ribs, made-in-house tortillas, and moles galore. The bar menu offers street classics including elote and tostadas … Sud Italia in Rice Village has been reborn as Roma, a casual spot with classic Roman dishes. The trattoria- inspired menu features traditional amatriciana, cacio e pepe, and carbonara pasta dishes, plus deep-dish pizza, risotto, and osso bucco. Annie Gallay A s modern technology merges with time- honored artistry, the sky's the limit when it comes to what's underfoot. SHIIR Rugs' new Leather Collection layers specially treated and cut leather with silk, hair-on-hide, and metal rivets. While the look is decidedly modern, the craftsmanship is ancient. Specialized artisans make each rug by hand at a meditative pace rarely seen these days — a cottage-industry trade passed down through families for generations in India, Italy, and Uruguay. The seven customizable designs include Warwick, a hand-stitched trapunto inspired by 8th-century Japanese kimonos; Breton, a cross-stitched tartan in vibrant shades such as citrine; and Hawksbury, its overlapping hides joined by metal rivets. SHIIR Rugs is a collaboration between interior design firm Soucie Horner, Ltd., and century-old rug purveyor Oscar Isberian Rugs, both of Chicago. Restaurant BUZZ HIDE AND SEEK W e've been obsessed with Patty Carroll's constructed feminist photographs since seeing the artist's monograph, Anonymous Women, in 2017. Now Catherine Couturier Gallery brings the Midwest-based talent to town. "Domestic Demise," marks her Houston debut with images from her ongoing Anonymous Women narrative. The vignettes are staged in signature rooms of the board game Clue. Laced with dark humor and captivating imagery, the female protagonist is obscured by props that portend disaster: smothering drapes, cascading cans of soups and vegetables, taxidermy that threatens to spring to life, toppling towers of books, strangling vines, and man-eating plants. Carroll, currently artist in residence at Studios Inc. in Kansas City, was previously a professor at School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a Photolucida pick for Top 50 photographers. "Patty Carroll: Domestic Demise," at Catherine Couturier Gallery, (through February 16); Anonymous Women book $60; limited-edition unframed prints $500 to $3,000; catherinecouturiergallery. com. Catherine D. Anspon BEAUTIFUL DEMISE Patty Carroll's Vines, 2017, at Catherine Couturier Gallery Patty Carroll's Guns and Roses, 2017, at Catherine Couturier Gallery To the trade at David Sutherland, Decorative Center Houston, 5120 Woodway Dr., Suite 170, 713.961.7886, davidsutherlandshowroom.com. Rebecca Sherman SHIRR Rugs Holborn pattern COURTESY THE ARTIST AND CATHERINE COUTURIER GALLERY

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