Category Archives: events
JOIN US FOR OUR HALLOWEEN PARTY NEXT SAT!!
Florence and the Machine
I am writing this post to thank Florence for last night. I don’t have any other way to contact you so hopefully you might read this. We all had such a great time at your show and I just wanted to thank you for the tickets. I was blown away by your performance. Thank you for being so generous and I hope you enjoy everything you found at our shop yesterday!! I love you. You are absolutely amazing.
!!THANK YOU DALLAS OBSERVER!!
Thank you Dallas Observer for the ‘Dallas Best Vintage Clothes’ award!! (Here is a the insert on what they had to say about our shop!)
This 3,800-square-foot warehouse space located on one-way Haskell is home to some of Dallas’ most uncommon clothing items. Owner Gretchen Bell opened the space in 2005 and has since hand-selected a large collection of women’s and men’s clothes ranging from the 1940s through the 1980s. From mid-century prom dresses to Western wear, fur coats, costume jewelry and a massive boot selection, Dolly Python is the best place to go for unusual vintage finds. There are also more than 20 antique dealers who rent out space in the warehouse and sell antique treasures like old cameras, dishware and furniture, so the friend you brought along with you on your shopping excursion should be able to amuse themselves while you try on an enormous stack of sequined ’80s sweaters.
THANK YOU
Dolly Python Keg Party!
This is another just for the hell of it party! Come have some beer, buy some thing and generally have a good time this Saturday August 4th from 4 pm til 8pm! The guys at the barbershop will be cookin food and Aaron Barker will have some of his rockin ice cream for you to eat. There will be a keg and some random whatevers- tip or get out.
Jessica’s Party TODAY!!
From the Dallas Observer Blog.
Written by the wonderful Obed Manuel and photos by the beautiful Jamie Laughlin
Rising from the Ashes: Jessica Luther’s Smoke and Mirrors Gallery Reopens at 406 Arts, Saturday
For Jessica Luther, owner of outsider art gallery Smoke and Mirrors, June 23 will be a kind of rebirth. If you’ve recently driven by the shop’s former location on Haskell, next to the vintage/curiosities boutique Dolly Python, you’ve likely noticed that the windows are taped up and the venue has been abandoned. There was no farewell bash or love letter left behind, but that’s because Luther was busy fighting for her life.
Having been diagnosed with Graves disease as a child, Luther had some knowledge of the auto-immune disorder’s power. But in February she learned the entirety of its force. Infections. Diseases. By the time she mended it had been four months of bouncing between home and hospital beds.
The financial strain of being uninsured took its toll on other aspects of Luther’s life. She was forced to close her beloved Smoke and Mirrors Gallery which she’d kept alive for the last year. It was evolving into a Dallas staple, offering low-brow, outsider, primitive, tramp and all-around interesting work by artists like Bruce Lee Webb, Clay Stinnett, Kevin Parmer, and Nix Johnston. But Luther didn’t give up, despite losing everything she had built. Friends and family rallied around her. Gretchen Bell, owner of Dolly Python, managed Luther’s gallery affairs while it was still operational. Ashley Harris, a friend of Luther’s, held a benefit that raised thousands of dollars to assist with medical expenses.
Photo by Jamie Laughlin |
The whole Luther family is ready to rock this party. |
And now, Jessica Luther is back. She’s strong. And she’s ready to reclaim custody her passion project gallery, which will reopen this Saturday. With the old location gone, Luther decided to tackle a new future with a new space, so Smoke and Mirrors now resides inside 406 Arts (406 S. Haskell Ave.), a venue that many locals know as the old Phoenix Project.
“What Saturday is about is me celebrating being alive,” Luther said. “It’s an opportunity to thank those who supported me while I was sick.” But the opening will also present a chance for the gallery to make some cash on the first night of business; it’s throwing a giant bash with work by ten to 15 local artists. All pieces will cost less than $100 bucks. There will, however, be a cover. One of the things Luther says she has noticed about the people who visit art shows is that they are sometimes more interested in experiencing art than purchasing and collecting it. So in order to enable both artists and art enthusiasts to benefit, Luther says her new gallery will charge admission to the exhibitions they host.
“I am a firm believer that artists deserve to be paid for their hard work,” Luther said.
But that doesn’t mean Luther has discarded free shows altogether. She says free shows will depend on the kind of art that is being displayed and who the artist may be. Luther also hopes to mix-up the gallery’s layout by having live musical or visual acts in one section of the space and the artworks in another. The first trial run of this experiment happens during Saturday night’s grand opening party when DJ Hammertimez mans the turntables.
The Smoke and Mirrors Garage Sale/Art Party is cash only. The event is scheduled from 4 p.m.-12 a.m. Visitors will not be charged for admission from 4-8 p.m., but after that it’s ten bucks and all you can drink.
BBQ and Beer party!! TODAY!! PLEASE JOIN US!!
Cutest Dog Ever needs A Home
This is the cutest dog ever. He was born with a facial deformity. The deformity is purely cosmetic and does not affect his ability to eat and live a normal, full life. He is a year and a half and healthy and about 12-15 lbs. Pulled from the kill list at the local shelter, he is very calm, plays well with others and needs a forever home. CALL THE SHOP AT 214-887-3434 SERIOUS PEOPLE ONLY.
Dexter!!
Over the weekend, My sweet friend Karen’s little Dexter dog ate some aspirin and got very sick. He is much better now, many vet bills later. Karen made these beautiful hand done cards and block prints of Mr. Dexter to help pay for his medical. Want one? They are $20 for the large prints and $4 for the cards. Every damn dime goes to Dexter’s fund.