Community is also important to White, a co-principal at Skyline Art Services. He describes the art show as a sort of community service, modest as it may seem, to provide a space and drum up some attention for artists in Houston that Skyline would not in their ordinary business get a chance to meet. Skyline is one of the largest art consulting companies in the country, placing works by hundreds of artists a year in public facilities, primarily hospitals and clinics. Its gallery on Old Katy Road usually serves as a functional showcase of works by members of a regular ensemble of artists whose works fit into their design programs. Hospital art is famous for being obtuse and tawdry, but Skyline hopes to improve matters by thinking a bit more critically about what a client really needs.
Skyline hosts a spring and a fall series in their gallery, about one show a month, each show with a new group of artists.
Montrose Art Society represents a wide range of styles and skills. Nico Whittaker's series of photographs of Houston skylines and landmarks, in electrical colors, appeals to our civic sensibilities without demanding very much in return. Michael Abromowitz covers his canvases alternately in vivid washes of color as background to rough geometric figures drawn from a dream of pre-Columbia Mexico or some voodoo ritual. Raul Gonzalez's works are easily the most variable in style, subject, and realization. His best works are the mixed painting and drawing on canvas. One of these depicts a car-bound vision of roadside construction, traffic signals, and a tractor- trailer, bound in overlapping and blocks of yellow and rose, and incorporating a traffic ticket into the painted surface.