Entries by DISHhouston (1315)
Ready for SpaceUp Houston??
SpaceUp Houston has announced it's “unconference” to be held at The Lunar & Planetary Institute (LPI) in Houston February 12-13! Tickets are available HERE.
SpaceUp Houston will include spontaneous sessions created by attendees as well as telescope viewing of the night sky, costumed Star Wars characters courtesy of the 501st Legion, and a Saturday evening presentation by Astronaut Clay Anderson. Other sessions at the two-day event will include a commercial spaceflight panel and a space show-and-tell. Lunch will be provided with every ticket to the event.
SpaceUp Houston will nurture new and radical concepts, will help develop partnerships, and is meant for you to create a future worth living in.
Space unconferences have been held in San Diego, CA as well as Washington, DC to promote discussions on cutting edge technologies, space outreach, and the future of the space industry in the United States. This will be the first SpaceUp event in Houston and DISH is very proud of to a sponsor!!
If you can't make it to the actual event, it will be livestreamed on February 12-13 at http://spaceuphouston.org.
SpaceUp Houston has partnered with the Clear Lake Area National Space Society (CLANSS) which has 501(c)(3) status.
The official SpaceUp Houston Twitter
For more information visit the SpaceUp Houston website


AIDS Walk Houston
AIDS Walk Houston is one of the Country's largest AIDS walks and DISH is proud to be a sponsor again this year! Feel free to join us as we walk to raise awareness and work to erase ignorance!
See you Sunday, March 13th, 2011!


DISH Goes Running...
Thanks to Houston Trainer Cari Shoemate!
CLICK HERE for the story and to join us!


Dr. Peter Marzio
Houston lost one it's most visionary arts patron today. Dr. Peter Marzio was the Director of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston and dedicated his career to making the art of world cultures accessible to all. He often recounted how art had changed his life. As a freshman on an athletic scholarship at Juniata College in Pennsylvania, he took a course in art history. A class assignment sent him to the Frick Collection in New York, where he was inspired by a Goya painting. This first museum visit was the beginning of his belief that art had the power to enrich life. He went on to earn a Ph.D. from the University of Chicago in Art History and American History. He began his career at the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., as a curator of Prints and Drawings. There his prolific exhibitions and publications were innovative and celebrated for their democratic spirit and broad appeal. In 1978 he became director of the Corcoran Gallery of Art, where he worked to expand the audience base, strengthen its art school, and promote its famous permanent collection of American and European art.
In 1982, he was recruited by the trustees of the MFAH. Houston and Peter Marzio were a perfect match. He loved the city’s entrepreneurial spirit, “can do” attitude, and diversity. Houston welcomed him, and he embraced the city and museum. As Director, Peter Marzio was the maestro; he directed major expansion and construction projects, led capital campaigns, and served on many boards and advisory councils. He was a member of the Association of Art Museum Directors, and its President from 1988 to 1989. From 1997 to 2000, Peter Marzio was chairman of the Federal Council on the Arts and Humanities in Washington, D.C. He became a member of the Wallace Foundation Board in New York in 2001. He was also president of the Houston Museum District Association from 2001 to 2005. A prolific author, his most recent books included American Art & Philanthropy (2010), Masterpieces from the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston: Director’s Choice (2009) and A Permanent Legacy: 150 Works from the Collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston (1989).
During Peter Marzio’s 28-year tenure, the museum’s collections grew from 13,000 artworks to 62,172. Attendance soared from 380,000 to over 2 million a year. Exhibitions proliferated, and grew from 26 in 1983 to 41 in 2009. But these remarkable statistics cannot convey the institution’s exciting chemistry and interaction of ideas, programs and people that Peter Marzio inspired.
His vision and leadership brought extraordinary, diverse, and original exhibitions to Houston. They included Treasures from the Shanghai Museum; Fresh Paint: The Houston School; Frederick Remington, The Masterworks; Rediscovering Pompeii; The Quilts of Gee’s Bend; Splendor of Ancient Egypt; Jewels of the Romanoffs; History of Japanese Photography; The Heroic Century: The Museum of Modern Art Masterpieces; Inverted Utopias: Avant-Garde Art in Latin America; The Peter Blum Edition Archive, 1980–1994; Masterpieces of French Painting from the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Afghanistan: Hidden Treasures from the National Museum, Kabul; Old Masters, Impressionists, and Moderns: French Masterworks from the State Pushkin Museum, Moscow; and Dynasty and Divinity: Ife Art in Ancient Nigeria.
Peter Marzio developed a multitude of programs to serve the diverse community he loved. In 1983, he initiated Free Thursdays. In 1993, the 10-year Lila Wallace educational program, A Place for All People, was launched. It was followed by the Wallace Gateway to Art/De Puertas al Arte 2004–2008 program for the Latin American communities and collections. As an educator of the first order, Peter Marzio was most proud of the museum’s outreach to schools, the Kinder Foundation Education Center; the Kilroy Education Center for Bayou Bend; and the Glassell School of Art.
Major collections came to the museum during Peter Marzio’s tenure: the Audrey Jones Beck Collection; the Harris and Carroll Masterson house museum, Rienzi; the Caroline Wiess Law Collection; and the Glassell Gold Collections. Under his direction, an unprecedented partnership was forged with the Sarah Campbell Blaffer Foundation. Cornelia Long, Chairman of the Board of Trustees, described him: “Peter was a visionary leader. He believed the museum was a place for all people and worked tirelessly to make the collection accessible and the educational and exhibition schedules exciting. He embraced diversity and the public. The trustees of the MFAH will continue to do so as well.”
Peter Marzio died a proud Houstonian whose legacy will enhance the lives of generations to come. A memorial, to be announced at a future date, will be held at the museum to celebrate his 28 years as Director of the MFAH.


Coping with Holiday Stress
What do the holidays mean to you? Joy? Fellowship with friends and family? Stress? For some people, the holidays are a time of stress, anxiety or even sadness. Often times these feelings are the result of thinking of loved ones passed, financial difficulties or regret.
There are ways to cope with holiday stress that allow you to acknowledge your feelings yet keep you in the holiday spirit. Here are some tips that help to combat Holiday Blues:
1. Create a reasonable budget to keep from over spending.
2. Take a mental break from the holiday season by doing something YOU enjoy. Read a book or go for a walk to relax your mind and refocus.
3. Get crafty and make special holiday gifts. This is a great way to curb holiday spending while still letting others know that you are thinking of them.
4. Avoid spending the holidays alone. Seek solace with friends and family.
5. Relieve pressure to purchase a gift for everyone attending your holiday festivities by playing Secret Santa. Set a spending limit and ask everyone to write down 3 things they would like to have. Have everyone draw a name and play Secret Santa. Everyone is sure to leave the gathering with a gift they wanted.
6. Give back to the community. Volunteer to serve a holiday meal at a local shelter or to read holiday stories to kids.
Outside of that enjoy the unusual amount of joy and happiness that is floating around the world this time of year and soak it in!

