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Texas Cultural Tour, Pt. 1 - Dallas


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It's Not Just Pro Sports and Shopping


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Dallas skyline

Dallas, the D in DFW has experienced rapid growth over the past couple of decades but has not lost its Texas attitude, ambiance and appeal. Following is short list of the cultural highlights of this important city.


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W Hotel Dallas

Where to stay?
There are many hotels in Dallas, but remember this is a spread out city with endless freeways that are packed bumper to bumper. Pick a hotel that is near your primary destination – use MapQuest or Google maps -- and if you didn’t drive, rent a car. Taxis are as rare as Texas natives and expensive.

If your business means the downtown area there’s a big selection of the chains catering to business travelers.

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Dessert Samples at Craft
For reasonable prices and convenient location I highly recommend the W Dallas Victory Hotel. Yes, it’s a chain but it feels more like a small boutique venue with excellent service, comfortable accommodations with the best lighting of any W Hotel, the Dallas outlet of a really wonderful New York foodie restaurant owned by acclaimed chef Tom Collichio, known as Craft Dallas and a well equipped gym. 2440 Victory Park Lane, Phone: 214.397.4100 www.whotels.com/dallas

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Rosewood Mansion entrance

If your visit is more to the northern burbs the charming Rosewood Mansion on Turtle Creek hotel is a sensuous treat if the expense account or budget is generous.

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Guest room
The rooms are bigger, distinctively decorated and friendlier than some hotel lobbies in Europe, dining is what you’d expect in a Mansion with very personal service, an elegant but not intimidating room and the menu is not overly adventuresome with wacky combinations of foods designed to impress the Food Channel folks. And there’s a neat little NY style cocktail-piano-bar area. 2821 Turtle Creek Blvd, Phone: 214.559.2100, www.rosewoodhotels.com

THE ARTS DISTRICT

The AT&T Performing Arts Center in Dallas, aka the Arts District is a unique, 68-acre, 19-block neighborhood in the heart of the city that cost $354 million, a big tab even in Dallas. A rare jewel that is the centerpiece of the region’s cultural life, the District is home to some of the finest architecture in the world. Enhancing the downtown Dallas skyline are buildings by award winning, trend setting architects.

Here’s a list of the venues in the Arts District with notes about those I’ve visited (noted by **) .

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Dallas Museum of Art

Dallas Museum of Art**
The Dallas Museum of Art ranks among leading art institutions in the country and is distinguished by its innovative exhibitions and groundbreaking educational programs. It’s a big museum, but then it is in Texas. The modern section can be visited and during a lunch break -- good food too in the ground floor bistro. There is always an important exhibit visiting from another museum around the world. When I was there the exhibit had been in New York earlier in the year. Jazz concerts on Thursday evenings. Good parking. Wonderful gift gallery-store. Dallas Museum of Art (DMA) 214.922.1200, www.dallasmuseumofart.org

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Nasher Gardens

Nasher Sculpture Center**
The Nasher Sculpture Center opened in 2003 as the first institution in the world dedicated exclusively to the exhibition of modern and contemporary sculpture with a collection of global significance at its foundation. The Nasher will take your breath away! There is a beautiful, superbly selected group of sculptures and statues inside and out in the gardens and traveling exhibitions too. There is a cute little café to enjoy a light lunch or snack. Nasher Sculpture Center 214.242.5100, www.nashersculpturecenter.org

Trammell Crow Center and Crow Collection of Asian Art
The Trammell and Margaret Crow Collection of Asian Art is nestled like a small jewel in Dallas’ Arts District, offering visitors a glimpse of a world possessing serene beauty and spirituality in the heart of a bustling city.

Belo Mansion
The current home of the Dallas Bar Association, the Belo Mansion was built in 1890 by Coleonel A. H. Belo, founder of the Dallas Morning News. Lawyers and law school attendees should love it .

Cathedral Shrine of the Virgin of Guadalupe
The city’s oldest Catholic parish, this High Victorian Gothic cathedral is the second busiest Catholic cathedral in the nation.

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Meyerson Symphony Hall

Morton H. Meyerson Symphony Center**

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Meyeson Center
Since its grand opening celebration, the legendary rich sound of the Meyerson’s Eugene McDermott Concert Hall has made it a premier destination for the world’s finest soloists and conductors. Entered the lobby and looked at the stage. No concerts were planned while in Dallas. The Dallas Opera (TDO) 214.443.1000, www.dallasopera.org


AT&T Performing Arts Center Margot and Bill Winspear Opera House**
With transparent, soaring 60-foot glass walls revealing views of the Grand Lobby and a café open throughout the day, the Winspear Opera House is a destination for all. Watched a ballet rehearsal from various seats around the space and there was not a bad seat anywhere.

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Wyly Theatre

AT&T Performing Arts Center Dee and Charles Wyly Theatre**
The world's only vertical theatre, the innovative design of the Wyly Theatre creates ultimate performance flexibility.

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Winspear Opera House
Think of gigantic box in which everything moves to create a space for viewing theatre in the round, on the square or with a proscenium arch. Acoustics were amazing. AT&T Performing Arts Center, Winspear Opera House, WylyTheatre & Sammons Park 214.880.0202, www.attpac.org

Booker T. Washington High School for the Visual and Performing Arts
The school's dual emphasis on arts and academics has produced a stellar list of famous graduates including Grammy Award®-winners Norah Jones, Erykah Badu and jazz trumpeter Roy Hargrove.

St. Paul United Methodist Church
St. Paul United Methodist Church was founded in 1873 by freed slaves from Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas.

One Arts Plaza**
One Arts Plaza is a multiuse structure comprised of residences, corporate offices and retail, the first of three buildings on over 10 acres at the eastern edge of the Dallas Arts District. Great TexMex dining at Jorge's (pronounced Horhay's) best verde enchiliadas I've ever eaten. 214.720.2211 www.jorgestexmex.com

Dallas Black Dance Theatre
Dallas Black Dance Theatre is the city’s oldest continuously operating dance company.

AT&T Performing Arts Center Elaine D. and Charles A. Sammons Park**
Weaving together the Winspear Opera House, Wyly Theatre, Strauss Square and City Performance Hall, the ten-acre park stretches from Woodall Rodgers Freeway to Ross Avenue, and is the first public park in the Dallas Arts District. Pick-up a lunch and relax.

OUT IN THE BURBS

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Northpark Shopping Center

Northpark Shopping Center**
Yes, a shopping center, but unlike any you’ve ever visited. It’s another example of the Nasher family’s love of art. Sure there’s great shopping from all the top stores in Dallas, NY, Paris, London and other cities, but everywhere is world-class art, color, fountains, sculpture and a center aisle missing the ubiquitous assortment of hair attachments, sunglasses, cellular phones and various potions and lotions. Take home something for the wife and kids and enjoy the experience. Good food hall too. 8687 North Central Expessway, 214.363.7441 northparkcenter.com

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Meadows Museum

Meadows Museum - SMU Campus**
Algur H. Meadows developed an interest in art during frequent visits to Spain during the 1950s, when he spent long afternoons at the great Museo Nacional del Prado in Madrid. Mr. Meadows began to collect Spanish art, and his collection has grown to be one of the finest outside of Spain. The paintings that comprise the largest part of the collection range from early Renaissance works, painted at the end of the 15th century, to modern works by Picasso and Juan Gris.

The majority of the collection, however, focuses on the Spanish "Golden Age." From the 1550s to nearly the beginning of the 18th century, Spain experienced a flowering of the arts. The Meadows collection contains masterworks by Velázquez, Murillo, Ribera, and many others working during this time. 5900 Bishop Blvd, 214.768.2516 meadowsmuseumdallas.org

ELSEWHERE IN BIG D

The Women's Museum**
A Smithsonian affiliate, The Women's Museum™: An Institute for the Future makes visible the unique, textured, and diverse stories of American women dramatically exhibited in over 70,000 sq ft of space. Using the latest technology and interactive media, the Museum's exhibits and programs expand our understanding of women's participation in shaping our nation's history and create a lively environment for dialogue and discovery. Thousands of stories recount public and private triumphs and the struggles of those who would not be denied their freedoms in all its forms: political, social, and spiritual. I have a daughter in-law, not a daughter, but I wish she had been with me on the tour of this wonderful place dedicated to women. So will you. 3800 Perry Avenue, Fair Park (yep, Texas State Fair Grounds) 214.915.0871 thewomensmuseum.org

The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealy Plaza**
If you'd like to see a rather tacky place and space devoted to a true American tragedy, the assassination of John F. Kennedy, plop down your bucks. Otherwise skip it.

For more information about Dallas and Texas visit www.visitdallas.com and www.traveltex.com.

By Marty Bernstein
Sr. Editor at Large