Connect with us

Dallas, TX

Sculptures capture the beauty of the ordinary at the Dallas Arboretum

Published

on

Sculptures capture the beauty of the ordinary at the Dallas Arboretum


Among the beauty of Texas spring blooms at the Dallas Arboretum is the glory of the simplest moments of everyday life. A series of Seward Johnson’s sculptures complement the 40th annual Dallas Blooms 2025: Outside the Ordinary and will remain on view through Sept. 1.

Every spring, North Texans go to the Dallas Arboretum for the blooming of tulips, daffodils, hyacinths and cherry blossoms and this year, they will stay for Johnson’s hyper-realistic works.


Advertisement

Kimberly Richard

Kimberly Richard

Tulips are in bloom at Dallas Blooms at the Dallas Arboretum.

“We put art in gardens because  it is as old as time. Art and gardens have gone together forever. Horticulture is an art in itself, and they just play off each other so beautifully,” said Sabina Carr, Dallas Arboretum’s President and CEO.

Johnson, who died in 2020, was the grandson of the Johnson & Johnson co-founder. After his uncle fired him from the family business at age 38, Johnson forged his own career as an artist. He created life-size bronze sculptures depicting ordinary people doing ordinary things.

“It’s all about the small slices of life,” said Dustin Miller, Dallas Arboretum’s Vice President of Programs and Learning.

Advertisement

Johnson also established Grounds For Sculpture, a botanical and sculpture garden outside of Treton, New Jersey. Johnson’s monumental work, Crossing Paths, features two women sitting on a bench, chatting. The sculpture’s home is Grounds For Sculpture, and this is the first time the work has traveled outside of New Jersey.

Dallas Blooms 2025 Dallas Arboretum The monumental sculpture, Crossing Paths, can be seen from Garland Road.


Kimberly Richard

Kimberly Richard

The monumental sculpture, Crossing Paths, can be seen from Garland Road.

The Dallas Arboretum displayed Johnson’s sculptures in the summer of 2020 and this monumental version of Crossing Paths sits in the same spot as the life-size version was five years ago. It is so large that it can be seen from Garland Road. But what does it mean?

Advertisement

“It is up to you what it means. It is a capture of just a moment in time, of something ordinary in time. Seward believed the small things in life are the more important things in life, “ Carr said.

The life-size sculptures dotted throughout the garden highlight Johnson’s skill and development of his technique over time. Tending the Garden is a rare commission.

Dallas Arboretum Tending the Garden Seward Johnson Dallas Blooms 2025


Kimberly Richard

Kimberly Richard

Tending the Garden is a rare commission for Seward Johnson.

Advertisement

“Seward Johnson had a woman approach him and ask him to create her likeness as a sculpture,” Miller said. “Interestingly and sadly, she passed away before it was finished.”

The sculpture depicts a woman gardening with her dog jumping up for her attention.

“It’s a great example of his late works. You can really see the fine detail, especially with the veins on her hands. This is the fully painted patina. This is all with automobile paint. They actually create this, and they layer it up so the first layer could be green and blue paint and then they work their way up to this realistic life-like look,” Miller said.

Dog Seward Johnson Tending the Garden Dallas Blooms 2025 Dallas Arboretum


Kimberly Richard

Advertisement

Kimberly Richard

Johnson used this clients dog as a model for the sculpture.

Johnson used the client’s dog for a model and his attention to detail can be seen in the woman’s clothing. Johnson would request clothing from a client, thrift appropriate clothing or buy new clothing from Bergdorf Goodman and replicate the texture precisely.

“All of this fabric is actually either stainless steel or blended metal, depending on what sculpture you’re looking at, but the texture is from an authentic piece of fabric to make it look so realistic,” Miller said.

Overlooking the garden’s concert hill is When Then Becomes Now. A woman is sketching a familiar vista.

“Everywhere this goes, they customize the artwork, so she is actually drawing the concert hill here,” Miller said.

Advertisement
When Then Becomes Now Seward Johnson Dallas Blooms 2025 Dallas Arboretum


Kimberly Richard

Kimberly Richard

The sculpture is customized for each venue.

This sculpture is not fully painted, further highlighting Johnson’s precise details.

“For me , this is one of the ones that most realistically shows clothes, especially that tank she’s got under the sweater,” Miller said.

Advertisement

Hot Weather depicts a man licking an ice cream cone. This summer, the flower bed surrounding the sculpture will features plants and flowers with names inspired by ice cream and sundaes. The sculpture includes a prominent watch, a favorite element for Johnson to create, and a bandage.

“He does little nods to the family business,” Miller said.

Hot Weather Seward Johnson Dallas Blooms 2025 Dallas Arboretum


Kimberly Richard

Kimberly Richard

This piece hints at Seward Johnson’s family business.

Advertisement

The style of the man’s blue jeans provide a hint about the sculpture.

“You can also start to approximate the age of the sculpture based on the style of the Levis,” Miller said.

Johnson’s sculptures show cherishing life’s simple moments never goes out of style.

Learn more: Dallas Arboretum

Advertisement



Source link

Dallas, TX

Parents fear closing of Good Street Learning Center as leaders push to stay open

Published

on

Parents fear closing of Good Street Learning Center as leaders push to stay open


For decades, families like Nasia Peterson’s have cycled through Good Street Learning Center, a South Dallas/Fair Park child care center that working parents can afford at $90 to $134 a week. Her husband and their five children spent their early years there.

But now, Peterson says the center could close soon. Center leaders dispute an immediate shutdown, saying they expect to stay open even as a funding crisis leaves the runway unclear. Parents say there’s no comparable affordable option nearby, especially for families who rely on public transit.

Center director Gwendolyn Sneed says they are fighting to remain open, pointing to pending grants and a push to rebuild their board.

But Sneed also acknowledges leadership cannot promise what will happen after January. “I don’t know about 2026,” she said.

Advertisement

The Education Lab

Receive our in-depth coverage of education issues and stories that affect North Texans.

By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

The numbers are stark: Enrollment is down to 15 children against a licensed capacity of 100. Staffing is down to two teachers from a pre‑pandemic total of nine. The center is scrambling for operating cash while recruiting a hands‑on board to help with grants, sponsorships and staffing. Dallas ISD provides Good Street an annual $23,000 stipend through its pre‑K partnership.

Founded in 1952 as a church‑run child care ministry, the center operates in a church‑owned building. The church does not charge rent, but leaders say upkeep falls on the center.

Advertisement

Good Street Learning has applied for funding from The Crystal Charity Ball in Dallas and H-E-B’s Community Investment Program, Sneed said. She says the award decisions won’t occur until February or March.

“That first quarter of 2026 would be pretty much a defining time for us,” board chair Jasper Daniels said. “We will know for sure whether or not we’re going to get the necessary assistance.”

The center’s origin

The purpose of the center is clear: to ensure “the working poor in South Dallas will have a place to put their children and keep them on a daily basis, [and] teach them something while they go to work,” Daniels said.

According to center leaders and the organization’s published history, Good Street’s child care ministry began under the Rev. C.A.W. Clark Sr. with trustees, deacons and church members.

Toddlers teacher Angela Nails holds 1-year-old Jayden White’s hand while a group of students walks to class at Good Street Learning Center, Inc. on Dec. 16, 2025, in Dallas.

Advertisement

Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer

An advisory committee chaired by Dr. B.E. Dade, with early childhood specialist Willene Dade as a resource, set standards around space, safety, sanitation, nutrition and staff training, and secured the city of Dallas operations permit in 1952.

The program has operated at the same site since then, originally at the Watson Memorial Mission on what was then Hatcher Street, Sneed said. In 1992, it moved into the new C.A.W. Clark Community Center built on that property, she said. The city later renamed the street Elsie Faye Heggins.

Sneed has led the center since October 2001, expanding partnerships such as Educational First Steps, Child Care Group, prekindergarten programs with Dallas ISD, and accreditation with the National Accreditation Commission for Early Care and Education Programs.

Jayden White, 1, climbs low shelves in the toddlers classroom before morning prayers at Good...

Jayden White, 1, climbs low shelves in the toddlers classroom before morning prayers at Good Street Learning Center, Inc. on Dec. 16, 2025, in Dallas.

Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer

Advertisement

Leaders and parents describe multiple generations of families continuing to enroll their children at the center, which has served over 2,000 students, ages 18 months to 12 years old.

The center is also four-star certified with the Texas Rising Star program. That’s the highest assessment level available through criteria like teacher-child interactions and program management.

“We don’t have to do a lot of marketing, because we’re serving third- and fourth-generation family members,” Sneed said. “Even now, the children that we have, they’ve had family members that have come through.”

The center’s challenges

The center’s issues began when they closed for a week during the pandemic, Sneed said. Some of their staff members contracted coronavirus and didn’t come back.

Without as many teachers, the center can’t serve as many students, Sneed said. But without enough students, the center lacks the funding from tuition to pay staff.

Advertisement

The center also competes with Dallas ISD’s free pre‑K programs, even though it formed a pre‑K partnership with the district in 2008.

Toddlers teacher Angela Nails lists off books of the Bible with students at Good Street...

Toddlers teacher Angela Nails lists off books of the Bible with students at Good Street Learning Center, Inc. on Dec. 16, 2025, in Dallas.

Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer

“Several years ago when they started taking 4-year-olds, we lost our 4-year-old population,” Sneed said. “So then they came up with the partnership where the children could come here.”

The school district now enrolls 3- and 4-year-olds into free pre-K programs, Sneed said. But “that’s cutting right into the heart of early care and education” for the center, which can only charge parents for after-school or extended care services since DISD covers the core school hours, she said.

Dallas ISD provides an annual funding stipend of $23,000 to Good Street as part of its pre‑K partnership with the center, according to a Friday evening statement from Dallas ISD spokesperson Nina Lakhiani. She said the district does not have discretionary or board‑directed funding available, and that contracts executed after the district’s budget is set at the start of the fiscal year cannot be amended.

Advertisement

If Good Street reduces capacity or closes, Lakhiani said, the district will guide families through transfers to nearby options, including Joseph J. Rhoads Learning Center and Charles Rice Learning Center.

For the center’s leadership, the crisis at Good Street Learning is intertwined with challenges facing Good Street Baptist Church. Daniels, the board chair, said he sent letters to the church pastor, deacons and trustees to seek financial assistance and help finding grant writers, fundraisers and marketers.

“A large portion of the expenses at the C.A.W. Clark Community Center is paid by the Learning Center, thus at the demise of the Learning Center, the Social Service Center could become collateral damage,” according to Daniels’ April 2024 letter.

Director Gwendolyn Sneed flips through letters of endorsement from parents of students at...

Director Gwendolyn Sneed flips through letters of endorsement from parents of students at Good Street Learning Center, Inc. on Dec. 16, 2025, in Dallas. The learning center, a nonprofit, is at risk of closing in 2026 due to funding difficulties.

Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer

The pandemic also hurt churches. Good Street Baptist lost members to COVID, including one of the center’s board members and another church member who used to help the center, Sneed said.

Advertisement

Leaders frame the next steps as a joint push: Stabilize staffing, rebuild the hands‑on board, secure grants, and address facility needs while keeping families served. Keeping Good Street open could also require five new full‑time caregivers, plus support staff and funds for security and building upkeep, Sneed said.

‘A generational place’

If Good Street Learning closes, it would become the latest in a wave of Texas child care closures since the pandemic.

State Sen. Royce West, D-Dallas, told The Dallas Morning News last year that over 5,000 child care centers have closed in Texas since the pandemic. That trickles down to a loss of nearly 75,000 child care seats in 2024 alone, according to the advocacy nonprofit Children at Risk.

At Good Street, families and teachers describe the stakes in stark terms: affordability, access and stability for their kids.

Brenda Holmes pulls the door open for daughter Aniyah Cossey, center, and granddaughter...

Brenda Holmes pulls the door open for daughter Aniyah Cossey, center, and granddaughter Ariel Holmes-Aguora while taking the 3-year-olds to their toddlers class at Good Street Learning Center, Inc. on Dec. 16, 2025, in Dallas.

Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer

Advertisement

“This child care center is the only child care center that working parents can afford to pay out of pocket,” Peterson said.

If a working parent can’t afford to put their kids in child care, then they’re at risk of losing their job, Peterson said. That means they’re at risk of losing their home and having to decide if they should feed themselves, or save money to pay rent, she said.

Brenda Holmes said the center provides exceptional care, including providing meals and teaching manners, hygiene and respect to her adopted daughter and granddaughter.

“It’s just like you’re taking your child to your grandmother’s place,” Holmes said.

Rikki Bonet, a pre-K teacher at Good Street, has been teaching since 2000 and has been at Good Street for nine years. She transitioned there after her previous employers downsized.

Advertisement
Pre-k teacher Rikki Bonet sets up a container of water and floating toys for students Toraj...

Pre-k teacher Rikki Bonet sets up a container of water and floating toys for students Toraj Russ, 3, and Aziza Fabien, 3, to play with at Good Street Learning Center, Inc. on Dec. 16, 2025, in Dallas.

Angela Piazza / Staff Photographer

Surrounded by students on a recent morning, Bonet said her Good Street students have a “100% readiness” rate for transitioning to kindergarten.

“This is a generational place people love because you get an education along with the devotion, the church side,” Bonet said. “…I just really hope it doesn’t close, because I love it here.”

This reporting is part of the Future of North Texas, a community-funded journalism initiative supported by the Commit Partnership, Communities Foundation of Texas, The Dallas Foundation, the Dallas Mavericks, the Dallas Regional Chamber, Deedie Rose, Lisa and Charles Siegel, the McCune-Losinger Family Fund, The Meadows Foundation, the Perot Foundation, the United Way of Metropolitan Dallas and the University of Texas at Dallas. The News retains full editorial control of this coverage.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Dallas, TX

Stars-Kings preview: Dallas looks to right the ship against Los Angeles

Published

on

Stars-Kings preview: Dallas looks to right the ship against Los Angeles


The Dallas Stars have one win in their last seven games and are looking to right the ship in the second game of a West Coast road trip.

Dallas fell in overtime to San Jose on Saturday and now look to bounce back against the Los Angeles Kings.

Here’s everything to know about the matchup.

Dallas Stars vs. Los Angeles Kings

Sports Roundup

Advertisement

Get the latest D-FW sports news, analysis and opinion delivered straight to your inbox. Plus, Kevin Sherrington’s A La Carte.

By signing up, you agree to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

When: Monday, 9 p.m.

Where: Crypto.com Arena in LA

TV/streaming: Victory+

Advertisement

Radio: Sportsradio 96.7/1310 The Ticket

Bottom line

The Kings host the Stars after LA beat the Edmonton Oilers 4-3 in a shootout.

Los Angeles has a 19-15-10 record overall and a 7-9-5 record on its home ice. The Kings have given up 120 goals while scoring 116 for a -4 scoring differential.

Dallas has a 26-10-9 record overall and a 14-4-6 record on the road. The Stars rank second in the league with 154 total goals (averaging 3.4 per game).

The teams meet Monday for the third time this season. The Stars won the previous meeting 4-1.

Advertisement

Top performers

Jason Robertson has 26 goals and 28 assists for the Stars. Wyatt Johnston has scored five goals with four assists over the past 10 games.

Alex Laferriere has scored 12 goals with 10 assists for the Kings. Andrei Kuzmenko has four goals and four assists over the last 10 games.

Last 10 games

Stars: 3-3-4, averaging 3.7 goals, 6.1 assists, 3.9 penalties and 8.1 penalty minutes while giving up 3.5 goals per game.

Kings: 4-5-1, averaging 2.9 goals, five assists, 4.1 penalties and 8.7 penalty minutes while giving up 3.3 goals per game.

Twitter: @dmn_stars

Advertisement
Stars drop another in overtime after Sharks rally from two-goal deficit in third period

Dallas allowed goals on four of six Sharks power plays, including the game-winner in OT.

Dallas Stars right wing Mikko Rantanen, left, reaches for the puck against San Jose Sharks...
Stars-Sharks preview: Can Dallas build momentum against Macklin Celebrini, San Jose?

The Stars will look to string some wins together after snapping a long losing streak last time out.

Find more Stars coverage from The Dallas Morning News here.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Dallas, TX

Cowboys news: Former Dallas 1st-round pick weighs in on who should be next DC

Published

on

Cowboys news: Former Dallas 1st-round pick weighs in on who should be next DC


Every offseason it seems like I see a linebacker’s name pop up that the Cowboys need to get to help the defense. This year it may be Quincy Williams. Could he be the guy the middle of the defense is missing? I’ve seen some reactions, and when you dig into the type of player he is the coverage numbers may make you second guess. And honestly, I get it because it doesn’t look pretty. When you actually dig into how Quincy Williams plays, and how he is used, the conversation changes fast. So let’s talk it through like fans, not scouts trying to sound smart.

The First Thing You Need to Know: This Dude Lives in the Box

Quincy Williams is not a coverage linebacker, and he never has been. He will not be floating around in space trying to run with slot receivers or carry tight ends down the seams. When you look at the snap data, it’s not even debatable. He spent hundreds of snaps in the box, very few on the edge, only a handful in the slot, and almost none on the outside.

That tells you exactly how defenses should play him. He is there to attack downhill. If you judge this man based on coverage stats alone, you’re grading a fish on how well it climbs trees. How Quincy Williams Actually Plays

Advertisement

What I like about Quincy Williams is simple: when he sees it, he goes. There’s no dancing, no waiting for someone else to make the play. He triggers fast and shows up with bad intentions. Is he perfect? Absolutely not, but were any of the Cowboys linebackers last season even above average.

He will miss a tackle here and there because of his aggressive play style, but I’ll take that every day over a linebacker who catches blocks and gets pancaked. What I found even more impressive was he lines up all over the box. He can play weak side, strong side, and take inside looks, but he rarely just sat in the middle calling things out. He’s a flow-and-hunt guy, so the Cowboys would need to let him scrape, chase, and hit. That is where his game makes sense.

Not Much of a Pass Rusher

This may be another area where people will get twisted. Yes, you will see him walked up near the line sometimes, but he’s not an edge rusher. He is not winning with moves or stacking sacks. Those snaps are about pressure and confusion to make the offense account for him, mess with protection calls, and let the defense work around it. He’s a blitzer, not a technician, and if used incorrectly, it looks ugly.



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending