WHAT WE DID: FEBRUARY 22ND 2016

Welcome to What We Did, our photo round-up that is posted every Monday morning featuring photos from the past week - and what a week it was. 

The Denton festival season is well underway now, y'all. Thin Line kicked it off in a big way. We aren't sure about y'all, but we had a great time (and we expect you did, too). In the middle of it, we ate way too much food at Juicy Pig so expect a post on that later on this week.

Below, are a bunch of photos tagged with #WDDI on Instagram (from both y'all and We Denton Do It contributors). Check them out for some instant nostalgia from the past week.

If you'd like to be included in What We Did, tag your images with #WDDI on Instagram, and check back here next Monday. Click the images below to be led back to the photographer's Instagram page where you can follow them and become BFFs. 

Got a question about What We Did? Send it to will@wedentondoit.com

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BEREAVING NEVADA

words by Dave Sims

The Denton music scene goes through fluid but distinct phases over the years, and to me Nevada Hill's art evokes the essence of a very specific era. The memories of the music, the people, the sounds and feel of the Denton community of the late oughts are inseparable in my mind from Nevada's work. Like the music it has bravery, ugliness, beauty. A hard inner logic. Uncompromising and jarring, raw but organized. Chaos & flow. Never completely abstract, with intricacy and detail always pulling my eye closer, to look for a deeper theme. The demanding images want truth, and aren't afraid of what they might find.

It's a record of someone who stared hard, past skin-deep artifice to the reality of viscera and veins, death and defecation. It's like Nevada had spiritual X-Ray vision. It was down in the guts of things where he did his hardest work, wrestling with a writhing mass of almost gothic horror until he'd wrangled what meaning he could out of it: intestines turned into roots, growing, maybe strangling; an exposed heart like a map of the world, arterial paths that wind and wrap and return. A necktie of people, climbing up into a chokehold. Lumpy, malignant folds threatening to overtake the frame.

Nevada's posts about the disease that took his life astonished but never surprised me. He exposed his dying self to us like his art exposed the world. Pictures of tumors protruding from his body seemed natural coming from him. When he described his pain and suffering he was cool and predictably distant. He never asked for sympathy but seemed grateful to receive it. A frank account of a ruptured colostomy bag was just a continuation of his discoveries. His art never hid weakness or humiliation, why would he start now?

One of his last images, drawn with little more than two weeks left to live, wasn't grotesque or jarring, but rather simple and affecting. A small figure with what looks like an outstretched arm and anxious, uplifted eyes sits atop roiling waves about to overwhelm and consume. It's as if Nevada created courage by staring at the hardest, most terrifying things and revealing them. The world, his tumors, his own fear.

I only really knew Nevada through his art. We spoke infrequently, and not long after we were introduced he moved out of Denton. He gave me a long interview once that was one of the most illuminating conversations I've ever had with anyone about the local music community, but at a 400 word limit a lot was left out. What struck me about him, and what's always struck me about so many of the artists I've been ridiculously fortunate to know in this town, was his integrity and his drive to create, to do hard work. It gave him joy to be nakedly honest. That last, frail figure was drawn with donated supplies at the hospital. In the midst of all he was going through, he wrestled a little more meaning out of the chaos. "I received some very nice brush pens and paper this morning," he wrote. "It made me so happy."

OPEN DATA DELUGE

Maybe you’ve overheard some very tech-y terms floating around in conversations while grabbing your morning coffee at West Oak, or your happy hour beverage at Harvest House. Not surprising, as TechMill, a Denton-based non-profit, holds their weekly meetings at both of these popular watering holes. Additionally, they encourage all whom are present to join in on the conversation. One of the most popular topics in our tech community pertains to "open source data," or information that is freely accessible. Denton just so happens to already be an open source city, meaning that all of the data collected by the city is available to anyone, but you need to be willing to dig deep enough to find it, which is often an unintended barrier for citizens who don’t have a tech-savvy background. Read on to see what kind of data we're digging into as we near Open Data Day. 

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MATERIALS HARD AND SOFT

You don’t have to look around very long to stumble upon great art in Denton. It’s blossoming all around us, all the time. An abundance of new art is just one of the reasons why we love this town. Sometimes finding great art just takes putting on pants and leaving the house.

Last Friday evening a few of us did just that and walked down to the Greater Denton Arts Council (GDAC) to check out the opening of their latest exhibition: Materials: Hard + Soft (National Contemporary Craft Competition and Exhibition). If you’ve got the gallery itch and are curious to see what the GDAC has brought in, this stop is worth your time. Read on to learn more, to catch a glimpse of our favorites, and to find out how you can see it for yourself!

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DEN10: FEBRUARY 18, 2016

Spring is here! It will be another beautiful weekend to get out there and enjoy all that Denton has to offer. Major events include the Thinline Film Festival events and and Photography & Gallery Experience. Be sure to tag your photos #WDDI for the chance to be included in our weekend wrap up on Monday. 

 

Questions comments and tips can be directed at glen@wedentondoit.com.


Thursday February 18

Baumer String Quartet and Faculty Recital I Voertman Hall in the Music Building I 8PM

Friends Trivia Night I Mulberry Street Cantina I 8PM

You've totally worn out your DVD set, and you did a happy dance when Netflix started streaming the incredibly popular sitcom that made us all fall in love with NYC and sitting in coffee shops. 

The Rotation: FUNDAMENTAL. + Visceral Trio + Scozzaro I Andy's Bar I 8:30PM      

Friday February 19

Beginning Handwriting Workshop with Wildflower Art Studio I DIME Store I 6PM

Wildflower Art Studio is holding class at the DIME Store for this month's installment of 3rd Friday  Workshops. Learn how to turn your handwriting into a work of art. 

Thinline Film Festival I All Weekend

The annual film fest has begun and will be hosting events all weekend around the downtown area. Check out films, photography and live music wherever you can. Look out for our line up recommendations tomorrow. 

Saturday February 20

Fandom Dinner and Cosplay Cocktail Party I Abbey Underground I 5PM

Let your inner nerd out and socialize with others who share your obsessions. 

The Weekend Recipe with DJ Dr. Skotch I 940's Kitchen & Cocktails I 10PM

Dance the night away with drinks in hand while Dr. Skotch soothes your weekend woes with the best old school soul. 

Black History Month Celebration I MLK Jr. Rec Center I 12P

Sunday February 21

3rd Annual Margarita Contest I Mulberry Street Cantina I 3PM

Head over to Mulberry for their annual margarita contest - a great excuse for Sunday Funday drinking. Consider this the warm-up for national margarita day on Monday. 

Monday February 22

National Margarita Day I Mulberry Street Cantina I 3P

Celebrate the unofficial state drink of Texas. It's your duty as a citizen of the Lone Star State. Go ahead and make a crawl out of it by sampling from all the local  bars that serve margaritas. 

 

 

HOUSE DISTRICT 64 REPUBLICAN DEBATE

 

Don’t know about y’all, but we’re still reeling from some of the sentiments expressed upon the stage at Dan’s Silverleaf during the Republican debate. So let's recap the whole thing and take another look at our candidates before casting our votes in the primaries (which start today). Read on to see how each of them handled the issues - because one of these three men is likely to be your next state representative.

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