We are closed today, November 21, 2024, due to weather conditions.
Our current COVID hours are Monday through Friday from 12-5 and Saturday 12-2. Please check back tomorrow for any updates.
We hope to be open again as soon as weather conditions improve.
In the meantime you can use our website to:
Stay healthy and hope to see you soon.
Our current hours are Monday through Friday from 11-5 and Saturday 11-3.
If weather conditions are poor such as icy roads, we may have to be closed. Feel free to call us at 512-306-1064 to verify if we are open or closed.
If a person doesn't answer and we don't return the phone call in 30 minutes, it is possible we needed to close because of the weather conditions.
Feel free to call back to confirm.
In any case you can use our website to:
Stay healthy and hope to see you soon.
We are now open for business. Due to the COVID-19, we are open Monday through Friday from 11-5 and Saturday 11-3. We will keep our hours updated here for subsequent weeks and hope to be fully operational
as soon as possible.
Appointments are not required, but feel free to call us at 512-306-1064, text us at 512-920-6094,
or email us at dan@austinartframe.com, to let us help with your art, printing, and framing needs.
You can also use our website to:
Stay healthy and hope to see you soon.
The Austin Fine Art Gallery website has been improved in the following ways:
Let us know if you are having any issues with the website or if you would like any other improvement. To contact us, simply click below:
The Austin Giclee Printing website has been improved in the following ways:
Let us know if you are having any issues with the website or if you would like any other improvement. To contact us, simply click below:
The Austin Custom Framing website has been improved in the following ways:
Let us know if you are having any issues with the website or if you would like any other improvement. To contact us, simply click below:
We offer several ways to make it easy for you to make your product choice:
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you prefer to get help:
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We offer several ways to make it easy for you to make your size choice:
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We offer several ways to help:
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We offer several ways to make it easy for you to find frames:
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We offer several ways to make it easy for you to find frames:
* stay on current page
** new page, can return
In the 2015 series captured on an iPhone 4, Katie curated a powerful symbolic ensemble that included a Lazaro cocktail-length wedding dress, Stuart Weitzman wedding shoes, Fiorentini Baker boots, a double strand of faux pearls and white gloves that belonged to her grandmother, MeeMaw, an Israeli gas mask, and a shotgun.
Set against the backdrop of an old rental house in Austin, Texas, originally built in 1947 as affordable housing for marginalized communities, this series contrasts luxury with poverty and freedom with entrapment. The house, once a beacon of hope, had deteriorated into the all too familiar symbol of neglect and exclusion reflecting the ignorance, denial and often hate that fuel injustice and corruption.
The central figure, dressed for a party that no longer exists, grapples with survival amidst the remnants of shattered reality, surrounded by debris and a dilapidated home, she clings to the remnants of past indulgences while confronting the harsh necessities- to exist, to breathe and to defend these rights.
This poignant portrayal encapsulates the fragility of human aspirations, highlighting the stark realities of privilege and struggle, deeply intertwined with the legacy of oppression and gentrification, the resilience required to endure adversity while acting as a warning to those who insulate themselves in posh comforts while turning a blind eye to the struggles others face daily thinking they are immune and not directly impacted only to wake up one day “All Dressed Up With Nowhere Left To Go”.
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