Fort Worth Key Magazine, March 2015

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AREA VISITOR'S GUIDE PUBLISHED SINCE 1967

MARCH 2015

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MODERN ART MUSEUM OF FORT WORTH

FRAMING DESIRE : Photography and Video

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March 2015


FORT WORTH

Key Magazine Contents 4

FRAMING DESIRE: Photography and Video at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth

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AREA VISITOR'S GUIDE VOL. 20

MARCH 2015

NO. 12

FORT WORTH KEY MAGAZINE 3805 Ivywood Court Arlington, Texas 76016 817-654-9740 e-mail address keymagfw@aol.com INTERNET ADDRESS www.keymagfw.com

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West is Among the Best for Culture and Shopping-and- Dining Delights

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Cultural District, West 7th St., Hospital District, Magnolia Ave. Map Dining in Fort Worth Key Points of Interest Fort Worth Stockyards Calendar of Events Climb Aboard Molly the Trolley!

Sundance Square, Cultural District, Fort Worth Stockyards, Downtown Fort Worth Map

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Fort Worth, Arlington, Mid-Cities, DFW Airport Map Grapevine, TX

ALTON DEE POWELL Vice President-Marketing Manager HOWARD D. WHARTON Sales Associate MICHAEL H. PRICE Contributing Writer LISA FARRIMOND Contributing Writer

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Framing Desire: at The Modern

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The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth’s FRAMING DESIRE: Photography and Video is an exhibition showcasing over 40 recent acquisitions alongside iconic photographs and videos from the permanent collection. The Museum has acquired key works by Cory Arcangel, Artemio, Larry Clark, PhilipLorca diCorcia, Rineke Dijkstra, Debbie Grossman, Candida Höfer, Misty Keasler, Ragnar Kjartansson, Robert Mapplethorpe, Gordon Matta-Clark, Ryan McGinley, Nicholas Nixon, Catherine Opie, Orit Raff, Laurie Simmons, Allison V. Smith, Arne Svenson, Frank Thiel, and Gillian Wearing.

Arne Svenson, Neighbors #52, 2012. Pigment print. Image: 29 1/2 x 44 1/2 in. (74.93 x 113.03 cm). Sheet: 30 x 45 in. (76.2 x 114.3 cm). Framed: 31 x 46 x 1 7/8 in. (78.74 x 116.84 x 4.76 cm). Collection of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Museum purchase, The Friends of Art Endowment Fund. The artists included in FRAMING DESIRE each use their medium in ways that transcend what the imagery literally depicts to intensify the idea of desire. Interweaving the documentary, subjective, and symbolic, these artists address sexuality, gender, longing, catharsis, and transgression, among other subjects. Andrea Karnes, curator at the Modern and of FRAMING DESIRE, says, “This

exhibition highlights several of the most important contemporary artists of the last four decades, with a number of new acquisitions that meaningfully add context to the Modern’s growing collection in the areas of photography and video.” Karnes adds, “The artists included here explore the premise of desire, a topic that has been investigated in art in intriguing ways for centuries. The works are grouped into three themes of desire: Ages, Rooms, and Scapes. These updated takes on the traditional subjects of portraiture, architecture, and landscapes make the well-traversed themes seem more magnified and provocative, especially when they are couched within the framework of desire.” Ages is a variant on the genre of portraiture, showing stages of life from early childhood to death. This theme includes Rineke Dijkstra, whose photographs Dubrovnik, Croatia, July 13, 1996 and Hilton Head Island, SC, June 22, 1992 are from her seminal Bathers series, for which she posed adolescents wearing bathing suits in austere, formal poses along the coastlines of Central Eastern Europe and America. In a broad sense, these portraits are emblematic of the particular societies from which the teens come, creating intriguing comparisons between youth of the various geographic regions. With the delicate age Dijkstra focuses on in this series, she shows an extraordinary and often painful stage of being human regardless of locale— acknowledging the anxiety, posturing, pride, insecurity, and vulnerability of the years between childhood and adulthood. Rooms takes into account the interiors and architecture that several artists in FRAMING DESIRE explore as subject matter, often to scrutinize how such structures function in our lives and how they can spark voyeurism, recall

Caption for work on cover: Allison V. Smith, Parked, May 2011. Marfa, Texas, 2012, Chromogenic color photograph. Image: 46 x 46 in. (116.84 x 116.84 cm). Sheet: 50 x 50 in. (127 x 127 cm). Framed: 51 x 51 x 2 in. (129.54 x 129.54 x 5.08 cm). Collection of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Museum purchase, The Friends of Art Endowment Fund. 4

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a time and place, or fulfill the desire to see a space we have not experienced firsthand. Within the theme of Rooms, the early cut “drawings” of Gordon Matta-Clark from the 1970s resonate alongside the voyeuristic perspective of the Holes series by Hubbard/ Birchler from the 1990s, as each group of images offers uncharacteristic views through architecture from unusual points of view. Scapes includes a range of artists who present landscapes, sites, places, or events both majestic and commonplace, often imbuing one with a sense of the other. Uta Barth’s photographs take on unremarkable aspects of the landscape that often go unnoticed in our daily lives. Her diptych from the series Nowhere Near, 1999, depicts a combination of crisp and blurred imagery of trees, rooflines, and power lines that, at times, borders on post-painterly abstraction. The artist’s cropping, framing, and distorted views subtly deconstruct conventional notions of cityscapes, edging peripheral street scenes and grey, winter skies toward the sublime. Icelandic

artist Ragnar Kjartansson’s video/performance A Lot of Sorrow offers a different approach to Scapes. He arranged for the band The National to play their song “Sorrow” repeatedly and continuously on stage for six hours, creating a work that is repetitive over a long duration, but surprisingly expansive. While the mood of A Lot of Sorrow wanes and swells throughout the performance, the shadowy and atmospheric nocturnal scenes, along with the song, create a beautiful and austere scape to contemplate the emotion of sorrow and harness the artist’s desire to work through personal and collective emotion— his, the band’s, the crowd’s, and the viewer’s. FRAMING DESIRE: Photography and Video is at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth through August 23, 2015. Special exhibitions are included in general Museum admission: $10 for adults, $4 for seniors 60+ and students with identification. Free for children 12 and under and to Modern members. 3200 Darnell St., www.themodern.org.

Rineke Dijkstra, Castricum aan Zee, The Netherlands, June 1992, 1992/printed 2005. C-print. Image: 29 1/2 x 37 in. (74.93 x 93.98 cm). Sheet: 42 3/8 x 49 1/4 in. (107.63 x 125.1 cm). Framed: 43 x 49 3/4 x 1 1/2 in. (109.22 x 126.37 x 3.81 cm). Collection of the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Museum purchase. March 2015

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West is Among the Best for Culture and Shopping-and-Dining Delights

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by Michael H. Price

As long as we’re “out where the West begins,” as an iconic figure in Fort Worth’s history described this Cowtown, then we might as well look even further westward within the city itself. Pioneering publisher and civic booster Amon Carter may have intended to give Dallas the razz when he coined that phrase — but the West hardly could have picked a keener starting point than Fort Worth. And Fort Worth, in turn, hardly could have picked a site more right for its burgeoning west side Cultural District. Rippling with heavy-duty commercial, artistic and residential growth since the dawn of the 21st century, the west side overall has seen its very skyline change with the transformation of a busy West Seventh Street into a streamlined conduit connecting the downtown area’s Sundance Square development with the Cultural District. Heading west (naturally) from downtown Fort Worth, one finds the Cultural District radiating from the intersection where Seventh Street crosses University Drive and, in the process, morphs into the historic, brick-paved Camp Bowie Boulevard. Visitors in search of western-style discoveries — from plain-and-fancy dining to fine art and varied entertainment — will find such delights in volume on the west side. Cultural attractions, restaurants, mainstream and special-interest shopping, and lavish natural gardens flourish as a reminder of how Fort Worth has built upon its frontier origins. Several of the world’s finer museums, playhouses and galleries anchor a vast Cultural District. The hand-laid red-brick pavement of Camp Bowie Boulevard is an attraction in itself, lined with an everexpanding array of art galleries, stage-andscreen auditoriums, boutiques, scholarly museums, restaurants and lounges, and shopping malls. 6

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The Cultural District The Fort Worth Museum of Science & History, commands the westward view of the district from Montgomery Street and just northward are additional cultural touchstones: An expanded and redesigned Amon Carter Museum of American Art, houses a definitive collection of American paintings, photography, and sculpture, from essential historic works by Charles M. Russell and Frederick Remington to a new acquisition of last-century Native American photography by Edward S. Curtis. Near by is the Kimbell Art Museum still living up to Newsweek’s description as “arguably the most beautiful museum in America” including its new Renzo Piano Pavilion addition. The neighboring Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth is the oldest such museum in Texas — housed in a work-of-art 2002 building designed by world-renowned Japanese architect, Tadao Ando, and featuring bold gallery exhibitions, concert attractions and, every weekend, leading-edge independent-studio films. The Museum of Science & History, anchoring a campus within the Cultural District, has been designed by similarly renowned architects Ricardo and Victor Legorreta. Inside the Museum of Science & History, one finds vast galleries of Texas-bred dinosaur specimens and the state’s oil-and-gas heritage, in addition to the Cattle Raisers Museum, the Fort Worth Children’s Museum, Stars Café, and a new digital Noble Planetarium. The Omni Theater, an IMAX® superscreen dome, links with the Museum of Science & History and boasts a new digital sound system and enhanced lighting.The National Cowgirl Museum & Hall of Fame is next door to the FMS&H. The NCM&HF honors women of the American West from those who have lived and worked on ranches


discover america the beautiful Admission is free. Albert Bierstadt (1830–1902), Sunrise, Yosemite Valley (detail), ca. 1870

The Collection of

Nancy Lee and Perry R. Bass MARCH 1–MAY 24, 2015 • Featuring a selection of paintings and sculptures amassed by two pillars of Texas philanthropy and business, this collection of Impressionist to post–World War II art includes important works by Monet, Van Gogh, Renoir, Rodin, Maillol, Bonnard, Matisse, Chagall, Rothko, Miró, and many more.

Admission is free to this special exhibition and to the permanent collection. Promotional support is provided by: Image: Claude Monet, The Gare Saint-Lazare, Exterior View (detail), 1877, oil on canvas. Collection of Nancy Lee and Perry R. Bass

March 2015

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or who led an expedition, or sat before an easel, aimed a rifle and hit the bull’s eye, or sat on the Supreme Court. When the museum meanderings trigger an appetite for fine dining, two long-established, museum-based cafés stand ready to serve. The Kimbell Buffet Restaurant offers indoor or patio lunch and a light evening menu within one of the most beautiful modern buildings in America. The Modern Art Museum’s 250-seat Café Modern, with an outdoor terrace, overlooks a serene reflecting pond. The Modern’s full-service kitchen delivers superb cuisine for lunch, Sunday brunch, and scheduled seasonal dinners. The Great Outdoors offers breakfast subs, lunch and dinner subs, soups, salads and all natural ice cream. Off University on White Settlement Road, a Texas barbecue tradition reigns at Angelo’s, offering a half-century of first-class BBQ and ultra-chilled beer. The Fort Worth Community Art Center, at the district’s western edge, showcases work by the city’s homegrown community of artists, in addition to live-theater venues. Neighboring the museum community is the city’s landmark Will Rogers Memorial Center, a versatile 85-acre entertainment complex — with 45 acres housing the Will Rogers Coliseum & Auditorium. Its majestic Pioneer Tower dates from the Texas Centennial Celebration of 1936. Still the most imposing site within the district, the coliseum holds pride of place as the first domed structure of its kind in the world. The complex also boasts an equestrian center and exhibit halls, home to the annual Fort Worth Stock Show and Rodeo. Showplaces of Heritage and Artistry and Nature Shoppers can find a broad selection of merchandise in the Cultural District’s specialty shops. European antiques and upholstery can be found at Domain XCIV and the dh collection boasts progressive furniture designs in an appetite-whetting environment. Southward off University Drive, visitors 8

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can experience the glories of nature at Trinity Park, a pristine oasis bordered by a fork of the placid Trinity River. Here, picnickers, joggers, and strollers can explore meandering pathways or travel on a miniature railroad. Opposite the park, across University Drive, Fort Worth’s Botanic Garden beckons — the oldest such site in Texas, a lush 109-acre tapestry of dappled shade accented by vibrant splashes of color. The Garden is home to thousands of species of native and exotic plants in 21 specialty gardens. The European-designed Rose Garden features more than 3,400 roses,and the 10,000-square-foot Conservatory houses tropical flowers and foliage from around the world. An on-site Gardens Restaurant serves light lunches and refreshments — with a view of the Garden and a varied gallery that often displays the work of local artists. Adjacent to the Botanic Garden is the Botanical Research Institute of Texas (BRIT) whose mission is to “reduce its footprint on the natural world as well as protect and restore ecosystem services.” BRIT’s building was designed as an example of how much of this can be accomplished. A short distance southward lies the illustrious Fort Worth Zoo, nationally ranked among the finest. The Zoo is home to thousands of animals, both native and exotic. Viewing facilities and natural habitat exhibits are set up for optimal views of the animals, often separated from their observers by only a river, a waterfall, or a large window. Shaded rest spots and picnic tables are available, with several on-site eateries. Across from the Zoo, Log Cabin Village offers another view of the city’s rich frontier history boasting seven authentic log homes, dating from the mid-to-late 1800s. Perioddressed interpreters greet visitors inside each cabin offering a living history of the home and its origin. The mood to explore might be triggered by art, dining, shopping, or the wonders of nature. Fort Worth’s west side meets all these interests and then some!


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10 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday-Saturday

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MEDICAL CENTERS

FORT WORTH SOUTH, INC. www.fortworthsouth.org W. ALLEN AVE.

9. BAYLOR SURGICAL HOSPITAL 10. PLAZA MEDICAL CENTER 11. COOK CHILDREN’S MEDICAL CENTER 12. TX. HEALTH HARRIS METHODIST HOSPITAL 13. BAYLOR ALL SAINTS MEDICAL CENTER

FORT WORTH ZOO

March 2015

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Dining in Fort Worth

ANGELO’S - Enjoy Hickory Smoked Ribs & Beef. The beef can be on a sandwich or part of dinner. If chicken is your choice, it comes in half or quarter portions on either a dinner or in a basket. Ribs & chicken served each day while they last. Choose from either beans, potato salad or cole slaw to accompany your meat course. Soft drinks, milk, tea, fruit juices or beer–draft, or bottled or in cans, and wine by the glass, are all available. For dessert have a fried pie. Angelo’s opened on St. Patrick’s Day 1958. People who have moved to New York often ask visitors coming that way to bring them some Angelo’s Barbecue. No credit cards. 2533 White Settlement Rd., 817-332-0357, www.angelosbbq.com.

THE BUFFET RESTAURANT - Dining in Kimbell Art Museum’s Buffet Restaurant, guests can enjoy Shelby Schafer’s homemade soups, salads, sandwiches, quiche and desserts. Lunch is served Tuesdays through Thursdays and Saturdays from 11:30 a.m. until 2 p.m., and Fridays and Sundays from noon until 2 p.m. Beverage and dessert times are Tuesdays through Thursdays and Saturdays and Sundays from 2 p.m. until 4 p.m. Friday times are 2 p.m. until 5:30 p.m. Friday evenings, from 5:30 p.m. until 7:30, features a light dinner buffet of soups, salads, pasta dishes, and a vegetable torte, accompanied by a selection of wines and other beverage choices. After dinner, guests may tour the galleries or sit back and listen to musicians perform near the Maillol Courtyard. Groups of 8 to 24 people may make reservations for 11:30 a.m. on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays by calling 817-3328451, ext. 277. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. THE Café Modern - The renovated Café Modern now has Friday evening dinner seating from 5 p.m. until 8 p.m. and cocktail service at the new bar until 10 p.m. Cocktails are inspired by the Modern’s permanent collection of art works. Other changes include brunch on both Saturday and Sunday from 10 a.m.–3 p.m., and the Museum will open an hour earlier on Sundays, allowing guests to eat and visit the galleries before the new noon screenings of Magnolia at the Modern films. Those who would like a bite to eat between 11 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Tuesday through Saturday may order one of the freshly prepared small plates, either hot or cold, available in the bar. Lunch is served from 11 a.m. until 2:30 p.m. Tuesday–Friday. Executive Chef Dena Peterson’s use of fresh fruits, vegetables, meats, breads, and desserts is magical. Never a disappointing taste, never a regret in what you order. Café Modern has been named one of the nation’s top restaurants by Gourmet Magazine. A children’s menu lists the foods they usually enjoy. For reservations, call 817-840-2157. New hours at the Modern are Tues.-Sun. 10 a.m.- 5 p.m. & Fri. 10 a.m. -8 p.m. 3200 Darnell St., 817-738-9215 or www.themodern.org. THE CAPITAL GRILLE “where the rugged and refined meet steak and wine” features a dinner menu offering steak, salmon, lobster and crab cakes and pan fried Calamari with hot cherry peppers. For lunch choose from the Grilles’ signature cheeseburger, the lobster crab burger, Maine lobster roll on toasted Brioche or the rib eye steak sandwich. The tempting dessert menu lists ice creams, cheesecake with seasonal berries, coconut cream pie, the Chef’s seasonal fruit sorbet, chocolate cake, and cream Brûlée. Overseen by its master sommelier, The Capital Grille features 350 world-class wines from around the world. Lunch Mon.-Fri. 11 a.m.-4 p.m., for dinner Mon.-Thurs. 4 p.m.-10 p.m., Fri. 4 p.m.-11 p.m., Sat. 5 p.m.-11 p.m.

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and Sun. 4 p.m.-9 p.m. For reservations call 817-3489200. 800 Main St., www.thecapitalgrille.com.

Cattlemen’s Fort Worth Steak House: Steak Isn’t Only For Dinner. Try the daily lunch menu. You can get a luncheon steak that includes a baked potato, salad and their famous homemade rolls. Start your meal off with a savory appetizer: “Shoot’em Up Shrimp,” Crab Cakes, Calf or Lamb fries, Onion Rings and the list goes on! The Cattlemen’s offers BBQ ribs, Lobster, Chicken, Pasta, Pork Chops, and “The Old Texas Standby” Chicken Fried Steak. Prime Rib is served on Friday & Saturday nights. Cattlemen’s charcoal-broiled extensive steak selection is “The Ultimate in a Fine Steak!” Steaks can be ordered with a variety of enticing sauces: Teriyaki, Cognac Pepper Corn, Béarnaise, or Gorgonzola. Seafood selections include Lobster, Jumbo Shrimp, Crab Cakes, Halibut, Salmon, Tilapia, and Catfish. Top off your dinner with a homemade dessert: Apple or Pecan Pie, Cobbler, Banana Pudding, Chocolate Cake or New York Style Cheesecake. Private banquet rooms offer seating for 10 to 120. Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. & Sun. noon-9 p.m. 2458 N. Main St., 817624-3945, www.cattlemenssteakhouse.com. CHAPPS Hamburger Cafe - Chapps serves hamburgers made with 1/2 lb. fresh ground chuck on a homemade bun. Or pick one of the 6 combination cheeseburgers. Sandwich choices range from grilled chicken, cajun or mushroom chicken with Swiss cheese to chicken fried steak. Dinner options can be chicken strips with gravy or chicken fried steak served with fries and Texas toast. Salads & a kid’s menu are also available. Side dish options go from onion rings to stuffed Jalapeño. Sodas, tea & beer are drink choices. Chapps serves lunch & DINNER. In Fort Worth at 6219 Oakmont Blvd., (Hulen & Oakmont), 817-263-5172 & Burleson, TX, 251 S.W. Wilshire, #126, 817-295-9972, www.chappscafe.com. EDDIE V’S PRIME SEAFOOD - Seafood, steaks and rhythm. Eddie V’s Prime Seafood was inspired by the great classic seafood restaurants of New Orleans, San Francisco and Boston. Eddie V’s offers the freshest seafood, right off the docks and USDA prime, center-cut, steaks - aged 28 days and broiled to perfection. The atmosphere is warm and inviting. Get in rhythm in the V-Lounge with dining and live music nightly. Open daily at 4 p.m. Eddie V’s Museum Place, 3100 W. 7th St., 817-336-8000, www.eddiev.com. FRED’S TEXAS CAFE - The burgers at Terry Chandler’s funky little Fort Worth joint have snagged arm loads of awards and even earned national attention, most recently from the Food Network and Guy Fieri’s Diners, Drive-ins and Dives. Authentic, mile-high hamburgers made from 100% pure Texas raised ground beef are Fred’s claim to fame. Try the Fredburger, the Big Fred, or the Diablo burger with hand cut french fries. Chicken fried steaks, quail, sandwiches, tacos, quesadillas, and salads are also served. Established in 1978, Fred’s offers visitors a taste of what the Fort Worth locals have enjoyed for over 30 years. Tue.-Sat. 10:30 a.m.midnight, Sun. 10:30 a.m.-9 p.m., closed Mondays. 915 Currie St., 817-332-0083, www.fredstexascafe.com. GRACE delivers a dining experience like no other in Fort Worth. Adam Jones, known as the city’s host for the unparalleled level of hospitality and service in his restaurants, invites you to enjoy Modern American Classic


fare, created by award winning Chef Blaine Staniford. In a comfortable modern setting that embodies the city’s energy, guests can enjoy the outdoor terrace on Main Street and a spectacular bar featuring unique seasonal cocktails with a separate menu for bar snacks. Glass-enclosed temperature controlled wine cellars house a selection of Old and New World wines. For private events four private dining rooms with multimedia capabilities seat 12 to 60 guests. Appetizers include crab cake, oysters, sashimi, and steak tartare. From the dinner menu, choices are prime rib, beef, lamb, pork, chicken, fish, pasta, soups and salads. Mon.-Thu. 5:30 p.m.-9:30 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 5:30 p.m.-10:30 p.m. 777 Main St., 817877-3388, www.gracefortworth.com. Mike Smith’s PARIS COFFEE SHOP (Paris Coffeeshop) is a Fort Worth landmark, with the invitation “come on in” at its entrance. The Coffee Shop is open for breakfast 6 days a week and lunch 5 days. Choices for your morning meal include eggs any style including omelets-plain, Denver, Greek or vegetable- French toast, pancakes, cereals (means oatmeal too), biscuits & gravy and hashbrowns. Sides include bacon, sausage, breakfast steak, ham, or a pork chop. The lunch menu starts off with a daily special, ala Carte, sandwiches, fish, soup, or salads. Desserts include mile-high meringue pies, fruit pies, cobblers, and home made cookies. Hrs. are Mon.-Fri. 6 a.m. until 2:30, Sat. 6 a.m. until 11 a.m. For more info call 817-335-2041. 704 W. Magnolia, www.pariscoffeeshop.net. Reata Restaurant - Choosing from the best that Southwestern food has to offer, Reata (Spanish for rope), offers a menu that ranges from steaks to Creole to Southern dishes. An example for the first course is Field Greens with Texas Goat Cheese, San Saba pecans with Sherry Wine Vinaigrette. The main course could be Reata’s Chicken Fried Steak with Cracked Pepper Cream Gravy and a couple of sides like Jalapeno and Cheddar grits and bacon wrapped asparagus. End with Texas Pecan Pie. Reata has a carefully selected wine list that “complements” its Texas cuisine. Reata is the name of the ranch in the movie Giant made in 1956, based on the novel by Edna Ferber. 310 Houston St. in Sundance Square, 817-336-1009 or www.reata.net. RODEO GOAT - Recently, in a contest between Rodeo Goat and some other really good burger places the Rodeo Goat got “Best Burger in D/FW.” Some of the choices at Rodeo Goat are Nanny Goat with herb goat cheese, lettuce, tomato, onion and garlic herb mayo; the Ravi Shankar features red curry, coriander, chutney, carrots, lettuce, tomato, onion and peanut butter. The Neil Young is a homemade vegetable patty with sprouts, tomato, avocado and green goddess dressing. Musthave sides can be Hand Punched Fries, Homemade Goat Chips, the Rodeo Side Salad and Texas Caviar. Desserts include Apricot, Cherry or Chocolate fried pie. A wide range of beers includes Texas Craft Draft, American Craft, and Rodeo Regulars. 2836 Bledsoe at Currie St., 817-877-4628 or www.RodeoGoat.com. St. Emilion - Le restaurant Français de Fort Worth. Since 1985, St. Emilion has been serving classic French cuisine such as Les Escargots in garlic butter and French Onion Soup as a precursor to a main course of prime beef, duck, pork and fresh seafood accompanied by sauces such as a black peppercorn or sour cherry sauce or Black Truffle Demi-Glace. Desserts include Crème Brulée, Brandy Ice, or Raspberry Tarte. A full wine list is available as well as Red or White wine by the glass. Nightly Blackboard Specials lists additional appetizers and main courses. St. Emilion will also customize a vegetarian plate. The Zagat Guide listed St. Emilion as one of the top five restaurants in the Dallas/Fort Worth area in 2010. 3617 W. 7th Street, 817-737-2781, www.saint-emilionrestaurant.com.

From the

Fort Worth CVB Food +Wine in Fort Worth By Sarah Covington, Public Relations Coordinator, Fort Worth Convention & Visitors Bureau

The 2nd annual Fort Worth Food + Wine Festival is gearing up for March 26-29. Taste the best in barbecue, brunch, and late-night fun at iconic venues across the city.

Barbecue Bash at Billy Bob’s Texas, March 26. Kick off the Fort Worth Food + Wine Festival at the world’s largest honky-tonk with a dozen of the state’s best pit-masters from 6-8 p.m. Tickets $60 including a performance by Wade Bowen at 9 p.m. Lone Star Grand Tasting , March 27 Over 100 exceptional wines, craft beers and spirits paired perfectly with the creations of North Texas’ best chefs at the Worthington Hotel from 6-9 p.m. Tickets $125. #LateNight Desserts After Dark , March 27 Using Firestone & Robertson’s TX Whiskey in all creations, eight pastry chefs and eight mixologists craft special treats from 9 p.m. to midnight at the Firestone & Robertson Distillery. Tickets $45. Festival on the Plaza, Saturday, March 28 Head to Sundance Square Plaza from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. and enjoy a cooking demo in the Pavilion or look into the 20 food-andwine artisan tents setup. Event is free. Rise and Dine: A Brunch-Inspired Tasting , March 28 Make a weekend of it and enjoy brunch at the Worthington Hotel Saturday, March 28, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tickets $60. Burgers, Brews and Blues, March 28 Sliders, craft beer and blues – it’s an AllAmerican evening at the Clearfork Ranch. Snack on burgers and local craft brews while enjoying the tunes of a live blues band. Admission is $60 and $75. Family Sunday Funday , March 29 Grab the family and head to Coyote Drive-In for the festival’s family-friendly event including food trucks, live music and more. Tickets for guests 12 years and older $50. For more information, visit www. FWFWF.com. March 2015

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Key Points of Interest

Amon Carter Museum OF AMERICAN ART -

Located in Fort Worth’s cultural district, the Amon Carter Museum offers visitors a stunning survey of American art, from the first landscape painters of the 1830s to modern artists of the twentieth century. The collection includes masterworks by such luminaries as Alexander Calder, Thomas Cole, Stuart Davis, Thomas Eakins, Winslow Homer, Georgia O’Keeffe, John Singer Sargent, and Alfred Stieglitz. The museum also houses founder Amon G. Carter’s collection of works by the two greatest artists of the American WestFrederic Remington and Charles M. Russell. The Carter’s holdings by these two artists are recognized as the finest and most comprehensive in the world. The museum’s photography collection ranks among the top five in the country, with more than 30,000 exhibitionquality prints that cover the breadth of the medium’s history. Continuous programs of special exhibitions, docent-guided tours, gallery talks, and lectures. Hrs. Tue., Wed., Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sun. noon 5 p.m., closed Mondays & major holidays. Admission is free. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd., 817738-1933, www.cartermuseum.org. Fort Worth Aviation Museum’s motto is

Preserve- Inspire- Educate. Designed as a community education resource FWAM features 24 Warbird Airplanes, including OV-10A Broncos, a F-14D Tomcat, a F-5E Tiger II, a BT-13 Valliant, a QF-45 Phantom II, an A-7B Corsair II, a TF-102 Delta Dagger and a RF-8 Crusader. In addition to the air park with its 24 planes FWAM has two museums- the B-36 Peacemaker Museum and the Forward Air Controller’s Museum holding more than 100 years of Fort Worth aviation history. In addition, there are cockpit simulators, an OV-10 Bronco Ready Room as well as historic aviation preservation projects. FWAM’s mission is to preserve and honor “the aviation heritage belonging to North Texas.” Hours are Wed. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m. -5 and Sun. 11 a.m. -5. General admission $5, students 6 to 16 $1, children under 6 free. Families $10. FWAM is located southwest of I-35 and I-820, three blocks west of Main St. on Long Ave. at the far end of Meacham Field. For more info call 855-733-8627 or visit www.fortworthaviationmuseum.com.

FORT WORTH BOTANIC GARDEN - 3220 Botanic Garden Blvd. The Rose Garden was started in 1933. It now has more than 3,400 roses with peak blooming times from April to October. Walk into the Fragrance Garden for the visually impaired, stroll through the Japanese Garden with its waterfalls, pools and Koi fish, smell the herbs in the Perennial Garden, examine the large collection of begonias in the Exhibition Greenhouse, and go into the Conservatory to see orchids and bromeliads. A fee is charged to view the Conservatory and the Japanese Garden. The main garden is free and open from 8 a.m. until sunset daily. The Japanese Garden is open from 9 a.m.-7 p.m., also daily. 3220 Botanic Garden Blvd., 817-871-7689 or www.fwbg.org. THE FORT WORTH HERD-TEXAS LONGHORNS -

Daily cattle drives through the Stockyards National Historic District recall Fort Worth of the late 1800s. Twice daily, weather permitting, and it’s not a major holiday, cowhands, dressed in 19th century ranching gear, drive 10 to 15 Texas longhorn steers down Exchange Ave. Best viewing areas for the 11:30 a.m. and 4 p.m. drives are the front lawn of the Livestock Exchange Building or across the street near the Stockyards Visitor’s

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Center. The Herd also offers education programs based on the trailing life of a cowboy for school groups and other organizations by appointment only. 817-336-4373, www.fortworthherd.com.

FORT WORTH MUSEUM OF SCIENCE & HISTORY’s

new facility, designed by Legorreta+Legorreta, features innovative learning studios, the Cattle Raisers Museum, the Fort Worth Children’s Museum, Stars Café, exhibits focusing on energy, history and dinosaurs, special exhibitions, and a new digital Noble Planetarium. The Omni Theater, an IMAX dome, is now part of the Museum. The theater has been upgraded with a new digital sound system and enhanced LED lighting. Open daily. 1600 Gendy St., 817-255-9300, www.fortworthmuseum.org. Fort Worth Water Gardens - Built in 1974,

Philip Johnson and John Burgee’s design for the Fort Worth Water Garden was to be a “cooling oasis in the concrete jungle.” The main elements of the design are three pools of water: the meditation pool; the aerating pool and the active pool where water runs over layers of rocks and steps to a small pool 38 feet below. Special lighting makes the night sparkle. Numerous plants and trees also decorate the Water Gardens. The site was used as the backdrop for some scenes from the film Logan’s Run in 1976. 1502 Commerce St., Hrs. 7 a.m.11:30 p.m. Information: 817-392-7111; reservations 817-392-5718.

FORT WORTH ZOO - A trip to the Fort Worth Zoo is an

adventure where you’ll see animals from around the world that all seem at home in their lush, natural habitats. In many settings, visitors are only separated from the animals by a river or waterfall, and are often face-to-face with them through large viewing windows! The Zoo is home to almost 7,000 native and exotic animals, including lowland gorillas, Asian cats, bears, penguins, flamingos, a world-famous reptile collection, an insectarium, and since the summer of 2013 two baby elephants: Belle born in July and Bowie born in August. Visitors can also explore Texas Wild!, a turn-of-the-century complex featuring seven regions of the state. Hrs. are 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The Zoo is open Thanksgiving & Christmas from noon to 4 p.m. & New Year’s Day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Gen. Ad. $12, Seniors 65+ & children 3-12, $9, 2 & under free. Parking is $5 per vehicle. Half-price tickets on Wednesdays. 1989 Colonial Pkwy., 817-759-7555, www.fortworthzoo.org.

KIMBELL ART MUSEUM - One of the outstanding art

museums in the U.S. The award-winning building was the last completed work under personal supervision of architect Louis I. Kahn. As well as an excellent permanent collection, the museum offers a full program of changing exhibitions, lectures, concerts, films, workshops and tours. Bookstore, lunch and snack bar (The Buffet). Open Tue.-Thurs. & Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. noon-8 p.m. & Sun. noon-5 p.m. Closed Mondays. 3333 Camp Bowie. 817-332-8451, www.kimbellart.org.

LOG CABIN VILLAGE - 2100 Log Cabin Village Ln. (off

University Dr. across from the Ft. Worth Zoo)- Set on 2.5 acres in historic Forest Park, Log Cabin Village consists of seven log homes dating back to the mid-1800s. Pioneer history comes to life through the authentic log homes and artifacts, a blacksmith shop, a one-room schoolhouse, a water powered gristmill and an herb garden. See historical interpreters demonstrate various pioneer chores such as candle making, spinning and


weaving. Special tours available. Hrs. Tue.-Fri. 9 a.m.4 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 1 p.m.-5 p.m. Gen. Ad. $4.50, Seniors and youths, $4. 817-392-5881, www.logcabinvillage.org. Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth -

Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth - Designed by the world-renowned architect Tadao Ando, this striking building is composed of 5 pavilions of concrete and glass arranged around a 1.5 acre reflecting pond. The Modern maintains one of the foremost collections of postwar art in the central United States, consisting of more than 3,000 significant works of modern and contemporary international art, including pieces by Anselm Kiefer, Robert Motherwell, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, Gerhard Richter, Susan Rothenberg, Richard Serra, Andre Serrano, Cindy Sherman, and Andy Warhol. Visitors to the museum can also enjoy lunch in Café Modern’s elliptical dining room set on the reflecting pond or shop for unique gifts at The Modern Shop. Educational programming and the Museum’s film series, Magnolia at the Modern, take place in the Museum’s state-of-the-art auditorium. Located in the Cultural District at 3200 Darnell St. Gen. Ad. 13 to adult $10, Seniors & students with an ID, $4, & children under 13, free. Half-price Wednesdays. First Sunday of each month, admission is free. Access to the Grand Lobby, Café Modern, and The Modern Shop is free. Hrs. Tue.Thurs., Sat. & Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Closed Mondays, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve, Christmas Day, New Year’s Day & Independence Day. 817-738-9215, www.themodern.org. NATIONAL MULTICULTURAL WESTERN HERITAGE MUSEUM - Filling in the gaps of history is easy to do

at the National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum. Through artifacts, artwork, historical records, and current events, this collection offers a true perspective and a fuller and richer cultural view of the people and activities that contributed to the building of the historical American West. The mission of the National Multicultural Western Heritage Museum is to offer the visitor a complete recognition of this historical process. The building’s layout, with a large central room, easily accommodates many chairs for storytelling, meetings and lectures. The smaller rooms are specifically themed with topics such as the Buffalo Soldiers, the Tuskegee Airmen, Native American and Hispanic contributions to the settlement of the American western frontier. Other rooms are dedicated to the Hall of Fame inductees and research of potential nominees. Hrs: Wed.-Sat. from 11 a.m.-6 p.m. Closed major holidays. Gen. Ad. $6, seniors $4, students with an ID $3, & children under 5, free. Group rates are available. 3400 Mount Vernon Ave., 817-534-8801, e-mail: info@cowboysofcolor.org, web site: www.cowboysofcolor.org. NATIONAL COWGIRL MUSEUM & HALL OF FAME

- Women of the American West are honored here. Not only those who have lived and worked on ranches or who have sat a horse in a rodeo arena, but also the woman who led an expedition to the Pacific Ocean, or the ones who have stood on a stage, sat at an easel, stood before a classroom, sat to put words on paper, aimed a rifle and hit the bulls eye, or sat on the highest court in the land, all these are celebrated for their spirit and determination. The museum with its more than 5,000 artifacts and information on over 400 women is located in Ft. Worth’s Cultural District next to the Ft. Worth Museum of Science & History. The Museum, whose motto is “The Women Who Shape the West…Change the World” also has an award winning gift shop you will not want to miss. Hrs: Tue.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Closed Mon. except Memorial Day through Labor Day & during the Stock Show. Closed Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Eve Day, Christmas Day, & New Year’s Day. Gen. Ad. $10, seniors & children $8, children 3 & under free with paid adult. 1720 Gendy St., 817-336-4475, 800-476-3263, www.cowgirl.net.

Sid Richardson Museum - Enjoy iconic paintings of the late 19th and early 20th century American West by Frederic Remington, (1861-1909), Charles M. Russell, (1864-1926), and their contemporaries. Legendary Texas oilman and philanthropist Sid W. Richardson, (1891-1959), amassed one of the most significant private collections of Remington and Russell paintings in the nation. The exhibition, “Take Two: George Catlin Revisits the West,” runs through Sunday, May 31, 2015. Catlin (1796-1872) was America’s most influential 19th century painter of American Indians. Paintings are on loan from the Paul Mellon Collection, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. Enjoy free docent-led tours Tuesdays and Saturdays at 2 p.m. Group tours should be scheduled ahead of time. The 3 p.m. second Saturday tour is followed by “For Love of Russell,” performed by a docent who portrays Nancy Cooper Russell, Charles Russell’s wife, telling stories about his career. Open daily except major holidays. Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m. to 8 p.m., Sun. noon to 5 p.m. Free admission. Museum Store. 309 Main Street in Sundance Square. 817-3326554, www.sidrichardsonmuseum.org. STOCKYARDS & Stockyards Station are unique places in Texas: an exciting blend of old and new. The livestock industry began to develop here in the 1880s. There were cattle, sheep, and hog pens and horse and mule barns. The original wooden barns burned in 1911 and were replaced with concrete and steel buildings. Stockyards Station is proudly dedicated to the preservation of the livestock industry. Evidence of that is the twice daily cattle drives at 11:30 a.m. & 4 p.m. Refurbished livestock pens and sheds, some with the original brick floors, now house 25 shops including restaurants offering everything from roasted suckling pig to enchiladas. This is also where you can go to Billy Bob’s, the world’s largest honky tonk, historic Cowtown Coliseum and the Livestock Exchange Building. Stockyards Station’s event calendar is at www.stockyardsstation.com. Along Exchange Ave., 817-625-9715, www.fortworthstockyards.org. STOCKYARDS MUSEUM - is located in the historic Livestock Exchange building. Displays include cattlemen and cowboy photographs and equipment, photographs and artifacts of meat packers Swift & Co. and Armour & Co. and their employees. A Native American exhibit features artifacts from several tribes with special emphasis on Commanche Chief Quannah Parker. An electric light bulb first turned on in 1908 at the Byers Opera House in Fort Worth is still burning at the museum. The North Fort Worth Historical Society sponsors the Stockyards Museum. Hours are Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Closed on Sundays. Admission $2. Free for children 12 and under. 131 E. Exchange Ave., 817-6255082, www.stockyardsmuseum.org. The Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame - housed in the renovated Horse & Mule Barns in the Stockyards National Historic District, honors Texas Cowboys & Cowgirls who have excelled in their rodeo careers. Many multiyear champions are featured: for example Ty Murray, Larry Mahan, Harry Tompkins and Charmayne James. Display booths for each honoree contain saddles, chaps, belt buckles, trophies and photos that highlight their careers. Most booths in the Texas Cowboy Hall of Fame are equipped with continuous-play videos detailing a cowboy or cowgirl’s career. Also featured are the Sterquell Wagons and the John Justin Trail of Fame. The 60-plus Sterquell Wagons from the 1700s to the 1900s, are fully restored and showcase the horse-drawn vehicles used for work and pleasure during that period. Hrs. Mon.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 10 a.m.-7 p.m. & Sun. noon-6 p.m. Gen. Ad. $5, Seniors 60+, $4 & children 3-12, $3. Group rates available for 20 or more. 128 E. Exchange Ave., Barn A, 817-626-7131, www.texascowboyhalloffame.org.

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SCOOT YOUR BOOTS OVER TO STOCKYARDS STATION

TWICE DAILY CATTLE DRIVES AT 11:30 A.M. & 4 P.M.

OVER 20 STORES & RESTAURANTS 130 E. EXCHANGE AVE. 817-625-9715 WWW.STOCKYARDSSTATION.COM

Big Smo Stoney LaRue Ronnie Milsap

11 Time Country Music Club of the Year

OPENER: Risa Binder – 9 p.m. Honky Tonk Stage

Aaron Lewis Bart Crow Band Jerrod Niemann Fort Worth Food + Wine Festival

Featuring: Wade Bowen

REO Speedwagon Martina McBride

CONCERTS 10:30 P.M.– DANCING – REAL BULL RIDING

2520 Rodeo Plaza ★ 817-624-7117 www.billybobstexas.com

FREE Daytime Admission or $1 off Evening Admission with this ad. Good for up to 2 people.

2458 North Main Street Fort Worth, TX 76164

817-624-3945

www.cattlemenssteakhouse.com

E-mail: steak@cattlemenssteakhouse.com

Serving Prime Rib on Friday & Saturday Nights BBQ Ribs, Lobster, Chicken, Pasta, Calf Fries, Shoot’em Up Shrimp and all the Great Steaks that make us famous! Lunch Menu Until 4 p.m. Daily Hours of Operation: Mon.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10:30 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-11 p.m. Sun. noon-9 p.m. 16

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Fort Worth Cats Baseball

817.332.CATS fwcats.com

Stockyards Be Our Guest!

Honoring Over 70 Cowboys & Cowgirls Children’s Exploratorium • Sterquell Wagon Collection • 5 Western Heritage Exhibits Jersey Lilly Photo Parlor • Western Gift Shop 128 East Exchange Avenue • 817-626-7131 www.TexasCowboyHallofFame.org

$1 OFF REGULAR ADULT ADMISSION

2200 Mercado Drive I-35W & North Side Dr., Exit #53 www.countryinns.com/fortworthtx 817-831-9200 / 1-800-456-4000

Bring This Ad To Get 10% Discount

Complimentary WEEKEND Shuttle Service, FRI. & SAT. 5 P.M.-1 A.M.

STOCKYARDS CHAMPIONSHIP

PAWNEE BILL’S

MARCH 6, 7, 13, 14, 20, 21, 27 & 28

MARCH 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 21 & 28

WILD WEST RODEO SHOW 8:00 p.m.

2:30 P.M. & 4:30 p.m.

Historic Cowtown Coliseum Arena… the World’s Only Year-Round Rodeo 1-888-COWTOWN • www.StockyardsRodeo.com 121 E. Exchange Ave. Fort Worth, TX 76106

Bring this Coupon to the Coliseum Box Office and Buy One Ticket and Get One Half Off General Admission Ticket to the Stockyards Championship Rodeo or Pawnee Bill’s Wild West Show! NOT GOOD ON SPECIAL EVENTS

T O R I C

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calendar of events M

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Dates & prices are subject to change. Please confirm all information with the attraction or sponsoring organization.

Ongoing Fort Worth Trinity Park. The Log Cabin Village living history museum depicts the lifestyle of pioneers who settled this area in the mid-to-late 1800s. Admission $5 adults 18+, $4.50 children ages 4-17 and 60+, $4 groups of 10 or more. Free for ages 3 & under. Hrs. Tues.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Sat. & Sun. 1-5 p.m. For more information, 817-392-5881, www.logcabinvillage.org. 2100 Log Cabin Village Ln. Ongoing The Kimbell Art Museum’s renowned European masterpieces, paintings and sculptures, dating from antiquity through the 18th century, include Michelangelo’s Torment of Saint Anthony and Caravaggio’s Cardsharps. Visitors will also see antiquities from Greece, Rome and Egypt. Late 18th-century through mid-20thcentury works are on view in the north galleries. Admire Impressionist and post-Impressionist favorites Cézanne, Monet, Picasso, Matisse and Mondrian. The permanent exhibition is free. Hrs. Tues.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. noon-8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m., Closed Mon. For more information call 817-332-8451, www.kimbellart.org. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. Ongoing See the Fort Worth Museum of Science and History’s World Trade Center Beam Exhibit. This 9/11 tribute exhibit features the largest World Trade Center artifact in Texas. This beam is a full-façade panel that once supported the three floors (101-103) that were located just above the center of the impact zone of the North Tower. The artifact, one of the few recovered pieces the National Institute of Standards and Technology has been able to trace to the exact

The Original and Only

location in the structure, is the focus of a permanent exhibit. Free admission. Hrs. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Sun. noon-5 p.m. For more information, 817-255-9300, www.fortworthmuseum.org. 1600 Gendy St. Ongoing Fort Worth Stockyards Historical District’s Texas Longhorn Cattle Drive. Twice daily, herders dressed in 19th-century cowboy gear drive 15-17 head of cattle down Exchange Ave. Best viewing areas for the drives are the front lawn of the Livestock Exchange Bldg. or across the street near the Stockyards Visitor’s Center. Free. Times 11:30 a.m. & 4 p.m. daily, weather permitting. No cattle drives on major holidays. For more information, 817-336-4373, www.fortworthherd.com. Along E. Exchange Ave. Ongoing Fort Worth Botanic Garden. Stroll through this 109-acre park of trees and flowers, then to the greenhouse, cafe and the waterways. The main gardens are free & open daily from dawn until dusk. A small fee is required for the 7.5 acre Japanese garden, which is open daily 9 a.m.-5 p.m. and offers tours that take about an hour. A small fee is also required for the conservatory, which is open Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. 1-6 p.m. For more information, 817-3925510, www.fwbg.org. 3220 Botanic Garden Blvd. Ongoing Grapevine Vintage Railroad. Take a nostalgic ride on two Victorian-style locomotives. “Puffy,” the 1896 steam locomotive, is the oldest continuously operating steam engine in the South; “Vinny” is a 1953 GP-7 diesel locomotive. The trains run seasonally Sat. & Sun.

57 Years in Fort Worth!

• Serving a Full Line of Sandwiches and Plates • Chicken and Ribs Served All Day While They Last

Hours: Mon.-Wed. 11 a.m.-9 p.m., Thur.-Sat. 11 a.m.-10 p.m., Closed Sundays

2533 White Settlement Road

817-332-0357

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round trip between downtown Grapevine and the Fort Worth Stockyards. The Grapevine to the Stockyards run departs at 1 p.m. and arrives in the Stockyards around 2:15 p.m. The return trip departs the Stockyards at 4:15 p.m. and arrives back in Grapevine about 5:45 p.m. The hour-long Trinity River Fun Run leaves from the Stockyards at 2:45 p.m. Pricing varies, see web site for details. For information, 817-410-3123, www.stockyardsstation.com/attractions, www. grapevinetexasusa.com/grapevine-vintage-railroad. Grapevine station, 705 S. Main St. Open 11 a.m.-1 p.m., Stockyards Station, noon-4:30 p.m. 140 E. Exchange Ave. Ongoing The Fort Worth Zoo. This home to nearly 7,000 native and exotic animals is ranked the no. 5 zoo in the nation by USA Travel Guide. Admission $12 13+, $9 seniors 65+ and children 3-12, children 2 & under free. Parking $5. Halfprice tickets are available every Wednesday. Hrs. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. daily. See web site for holiday hours. For more information 817-871-7050, www.fortworthzoo.org. 1989 Colonial Pkwy. Ongoing Fort Worth Museum of Science and History’s satellite exhibit of 150 Years of Fort Worth. Fort Worth’s interesting history is housed in the nearly 100-year-old Fire Station No. 1 building located in the City Center Complex. This exhibit traces Fort Worth’s development from its beginning as a frontier outpost, through its rowdy youth as a cattle town to the present. See graph-

ics, historical artifacts, photographs and documents, reproduced paintings and original posters. The building that houses the exhibit is also a valuable piece of Fort Worth history since it is the site of the original city hall. Free admission. Hrs. 9 a.m.-8 p.m. daily. For more information, 817-2559300, www.fwmuseum.org/150-fort-worth-history. Corner of 2nd & Commerce Sts. Ongoing The National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame. See more than 2,000 artifacts about the remarkable women that shaped the West. Hrs. Tue.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Closed for major holidays; see web site for details. Admission $10 13+, $8 seniors 60+, $8 children 3-12, children 3 & under free with paid adult. For more information, 817-336-4475, 800476-3263, www.cowgirl.net. 1720 Gendy St. Ongoing The Fort Worth Museum of Science and History. See history and nature with stunning IMAX cinematography and audio. This month’s features include: Jerusalem, Journey to the South Pacific, Tornado Alley, Humpback Wales and more. Gen. Ad. $6 guests, $3 members. For complete list of show times, 817-255-9540, www. fortworthmuseum.org/omni-imax-now-showing. 1600 Gendy St. Ongoing The Christian Arts Museum. The Christian Arts Museum showcases “Inspirational Art,” including a three dimensional, full-size exhibition that recreates Leonardo da Vinci’s famous

Now through April 26, 2015

Local Support Provided by:

Exhibit Sponsor

fortworthmuseum.org

Exhibit Sponsor

Official Airline

Media Sponsor

What’s Up, Doc? The Animation Art of Chuck Jones is a partnership between the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Service, the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the Chuck Jones Center for Creativity, and Museum of the Moving Image. Photograph and drawings courtesy Chuck Jones Center for Creativity; Film stills courtesy Warner Bros.™; Looney Tunes Characters © & TM Warner Bros.; Rikki Tiki Tavi drawing © CJE

Key Mag, March 2015, 4.5 x 3.75 WUD color March

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painting, The Last Supper. Free admission. Hrs. Wed.-Sat. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. For more information, 817-332-7878, www.cacmuseum.org. 3221 Hamilton Ave. Ongoing Fort Worth Nature Center & Refuge. This 3,621-acre refuge is one of the largest cityowned nature centers in the United States. It was designated as a National Natural Landmark in 1980 and offers special events, educational programs and naturalist-led nature hikes. Admission $5 adults, $2 children 3-12, free to children under 3, $3 seniors 65+, $1 discount per person with Military ID-Active/Retired. Hrs. Refuge 8 a.m.-5 p.m., hours vary for special events. See web site for details. For more information, 817-392-7410, www.fwnaturecenter.org. 9601 Fossil Ridge Rd. Fridays & Saturdays Four Day Weekend comedy. This six-member comedy troupe in downtown Fort Worth weaves audience participation, videos and music with their improvisational skills. The talented cast has created the longestrunning live show in Fort Worth’s history. Tickets $20. Ages 18+ are welcome. Performances Fri. & Sat., 7:30 p.m. & 10 p.m. For information, 817-226-4329, www.fourdayweekend.com. 312 Houston St. Through March 7 Asher Lev at Circle Theatre. Adapted from the novel by Chaim Potok, My Name is Asher Lev is the journey of a young Jewish painter with a talent that threatens to destroy

his relationship with his parents. Young Asher realizes he must make a difficult choice between art and his Hassidic heritage. This stirring adaptation of a modern classic presents a heartbreaking and triumphant vision of what it means to be an artist. Ticket prices, performance dates and times vary. For more information, www.circletheatre.com. 230 West Fourth Street in Sundance Square. Through March 8 Disney’s The Little Mermaid JR. at Theatre Arlington. Journey “under the sea” with Ariel and her aquatic friends. In a magical underwater kingdom, the beautiful young mermaid longs to leave her ocean home (and her fins) behind and live in the world above. Tickets $10. Performances Fri.-Sat. 7:30 p.m. & Sat-Sun. 2 p.m. For more information, www.theatrearlington.org, 817275-7661. 305 W. Main St., Arlington, TX 76010. Through March 8 Steel Magnolias at Casa Mañana. Set in Truvy’s Beauty Salon in Chinquapin, Louisiana, Steel Magnolias examines the relationships of six southern ladies who gather regularly to gossip, needle and harangue each other through the best and worst of times. Performance times and ticket prices vary. For information, 817-332-2272, www.casamanana.org. 3101 West Lancaster. Through March 22 Stage West Theatre presents, The (curious case of the) Watson Intelligence. Watson: trusty sidekick to Sherlock Holmes; loyal engineer who built Bell’s first telephone; unstoppable super-computer that became the reigning Jeopardy! champ; amiable techno-dweeb, just looking for love. These four faithful companions become one in this brilliant and witty, time jumping play. It’s a loving tribute, and cautionary tale, dedicated to the people – and machines – upon which we all depend, and to the strength of our connections to one another. Performance times and ticket prices vary. For more information, 817-784-9378, www.stagewest.org. 821/823 W. Vickery Blvd. Through April 5 Focus exhibit: RongRong&inri at The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, features the works of the Chinese/Japanese collaborative team RongRong&inri, who have been pushing the boundaries of traditional blackand-white photography together since 2000. The husband and wife are widely recognized for self-portraits that chronicle their lives together. $10 adults 13+, $4 students with ID & seniors 60+. Free for children 12 & under and Modern members. For more information, 817-738-9215. www.themodern.org. 3200 Darnell St. Through April 22 Peanuts…Naturally exhibit at the Tower Gallery in Downtown Grapevine. How many suns? Is the Earth flat? Charles Schulz touched on many aspects of the natural world during the nearly 50 years he created the Peanuts comic strip. Hrs: Mon.-Fri., 8 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m-6:30 p.m. and Sun. noon-5 p.m. Free Admission. For more information, 817-4103185, www.grapevinetexasusa.com. 636 S. Main St. Grapevine, TX 76051.

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Through April 26 What’s Up, Doc? The Animation Art of Chuck Jones Exhibition at The Fort Worth Museum of Science & History. This new traveling exhibition reveals the creative genius behind some of the most enduring cartoons and animated films of all time. What’s Up, Doc? examines Jones’ development as a filmmaker and visual artist, showcasing many of his most significant films. For more information, 817-255-9540, www.fortworthmuseum.org. 1600 Gendy St. Through May 17 Benito Huerta: Axis Mundi v.2 exhibit at Amon Carter Museum of American Art. Local artist Benito Huerta strives to expand the boundaries of art by creating works that are symbolic, interactive, and relevant to viewers. Free admission. Hrs. Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Closed Mon. and major holidays. For more information, 817-738-1933, www.cartermuseum. org. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd. Through May 24 The Collection of Nancy Lee and Perry R. Bass at the Kimbell Art Museum. See a selection of paintings and sculptures amassed by two pillars of Texas philanthropy and business. Enjoy 37 Impressionist to post–World War II paintings and sculptures from artist like Van Gogh, Picasso, Monet, Pissarro, Renoir, Vuillard, Matisse, Chagall and Rothko and sculptures by Rodin. The exhibition is free. Hrs. Tues.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. noon-8 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m., Closed Mon. For more information call 817-332-8451, www.kimbellart. org. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. Through May 31 Take Two: George Catlin Revisits the West exhibit at the Sid Richardson Museum. Paintings by George Catlin, the influential 19th century American Indian painter. Free docent-guided tours Tue. & Sat. 2 p.m. See web site for details. Hrs. Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri. & Sat. 9 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. For information, 817-332-6554, www.sidrichardsonmuseum.org. 309 Main Street in Sundance Square. Through Aug. 2 Audubon’s Beasts: At Amon Carter Museum of American Art. Industrious field mice, frolicking squirrels, fierce otters, and fearsome wild cats are just some of the stars of this selection of hand-painted prints by famed scientist and artist John James Audubon (1785– 1851). Free admission. Hrs. Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. noon-5 p.m. Closed Mon. and major holidays. For more information, www.cartermuseum.org. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd. Through Aug. 2 American Still Life exhibit at Amon Carter Museum of American Art. This exhibition showcases 60 works from the museum’s collection of still lifes and is organized in celebration of the recent acquisition of Raphaelle Peale’s Peaches and Grapes in a Chinese Export Basket (1812). See the works of William Harnett, John Frederic Peto, Georgia O’Keeffe, Arthur Dove and more. Free admission. Hrs. Tues., Wed., Fri., Sat.

Take Two: George Catlin Revisits the West

“Take Two: George Catlin Revisits the West” at the Sid Richardson Museum runs through May 31, 2015. The 17 paintings in the exhibition portraying eight American Indian tribes are from Catlin’s Cartoon Collection on loan from the Paul Mellon Collection at the National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. A rare edition of Catlin’s “Letters and Notes on the Manners, Customs, and Condition of the North American Indians,” and two of his American Indian

Mandan War Chief with His Favorite Wife, 1861/1869, oil on card mounted on paperboard, George Catlin, Paul Mellon Collection, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. portfolios are also on loan from a private collector. Mary Burke, director of the Sid Richardson, said, “We are delighted that our first loan exhibition from the National Gallery of Art features a selection from

Camanchee Horsemanship, 1861/1869, oil on card mounted on paperboard, George Catlin, Paul Mellon Collection, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. George Catlin’s Cartoon Collection. Thirteen of the works have never been exhibited in Texas.” Guest curator for “Take Two” is Brian W. Dippie, Ph.D., professor emeritus of history at the University of Victoria, British Columbia. Dr. Dippie is a specialist in the history of Western American art and has published extensively on George Catlin. The exhibition includes the Caddo, Comanche and Kiowa tribes, Texas tribes that Catlin encountered in the Arkansas Territory, and the Cheyenne, Mandan, Ojibwa, Pawnee, and Sioux Plains Indian tribes. Free admission daily. Free docent-guided tours. 309 Main St., www.sidrichardsonmuseum.org/144.

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10 a.m.-5 p.m., Thurs. 10 a.m.-8 p.m., Sun. noon5 p.m. Closed Mon. and major holidays. For more information, 817-738-1933, www.cartermuseum. org. 3501 Camp Bowie Blvd. Through Aug. 23 The Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth features Framing Desire: Photography and Video. This exhibition showcases over 40 recent acquisitions alongside iconic photographs and videos from the permanent collection. The artists use their medium in ways that transcend what the imagery literally depicts to intensify the idea of desire. Interweaving the documentary, subjective, and symbolic, these artists address sexuality, gender, longing, catharsis, and transgression, among other subjects. For more information, 817-738-9215. www.themodern.org. 3200 Darnell St. Through Nov. 14 Lone Star Murder Mysteries presents Missed Fortune. Greedy Granbury Green, the town’s big shot banker, has been bumped off and Marshal Jim Courtright may need a crystal ball to figure out who done it! All predictions indicate laughter in the immediate future as you interactively help the Marshal read the signs and solve the crime. Tickets $59 per person for entertainment and dinner. For more information, 817-310-5588, www.texasstardinnertheater.com. 816 S. Main St., Grapevine, TX 76051. 3-29 Thomas Arvid Exhibition presented by Milan Gallery. Enjoy an exhibition by Thomas Arvid, America’s premier painter of wine. Two special Meet the Artist receptions are scheduled on March 7 from 6-9 p.m. and March 8 from 1-3 p.m. with a live painting presentation by the artist. Both appearances are free and open to the public. Reservations requested. For more information, 817-338-4278 or www.milangallery. com. 505 Houston St. 6 Artful Readings at Kimbell Art Museum. The selection for the evening is A Perfect Red: Empire, Espionage, and the Quest for the Color of Desire by Amy Greenfield. Participants explore connections in the literary and visual arts through group discussions and special presentations on selected books. Includes wine and light refreshments, as well as a 20% discount on Artful Readings selections in the Museum Shop. Lecture begins 5:30 p.m. For more information, 817-332-8451, www. kimbellart.org. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. 6 Billy Bob’s Texas-Big Smo. Tickets $12 & $18. Performance 10:30 p.m. www.billybobstexas.com. 817-624-7117. 2520 Rodeo Plaza. 6-8 Magnolia at the Modern. This ongoing series features critically-acclaimed films. March’s showing: Red Army-Mar. 6-8. Tickets $9, $7 for Modern members. Showtimes vary, see website for details. The Sunday noon show is half price. Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, www.themodern.org/films/ upcoming. 3200 Darnell St. 6,7,13,14,20,21,27,28 Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District Cowtown Coliseum hosts

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the Stockyards Championship Rodeo. Reserved box seats & VIP $22.50, Gen. Ad. $17.50, seniors 60+, $12.50 & children 3-12, $10. 8 p.m. www. StockyardsRodeo.com. 817-625-1025. 121 E. Exchange Ave. 7 AT&T American Cup. Featuring the world’s best gymnasts in a one-day all-around competition, the AT&T American Cup is the USA’s most prestigious international invitational and part of the International Gymnastics Federation’s all-around World Cup Series. For information and tickets, www. attstadium.com. AT&T Stadium, One AT&T Way, Arlington, TX 76011. 7 Billy Bob’s Texas-Stoney LaRue. Tickets $16 & $22. Performance 10:30 p.m. www.billybobstexas.com. 817-624-7117. 2520 Rodeo Plaza. 7-22 Spring Breakout at Six Flags Over Texas. Shake off the winter blues and get ready for big thrills and fun in the sun. Park hours vary, see website for details, www.sixflags.com/overtexas/planyour-visit/park-operating-schedule. Six Flags Over Texas, 2201 Rd. to Six Flags, Arlington, TX 76011. 7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,21,28 Fort Worth Stockyards National Historic District-Cowtown Coliseum hosts Pawnee Bill’s Wild West Show. Family friendly entertainment. Box seats $18, Gen. Ad. $15, seniors 60+ $11 & children 3-12, $8. Performances 2:30 p.m. & 4:30 p.m. www. StockyardsRodeo.com. 817-625-1025. 121 E. Exchange Ave. 10-13 Spring Break at the Kimbell Art Museum. Celebrate with ongoing art activities, interactive family tours, storybook readings, teen studios led by guest artists, and films provided by Lone Star Film Society. Hrs. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Free admission, no reservations for this program. For more information, 817-332-8451, www.kimbellart.org. 3333 Camp Bowie Blvd. 13 Billy Bob’s Texas-Ronnie Milsap. Tickets $15 & $30. Performance 10:30 p.m. www.billybobstexas.com. 817-624-7117. 2520 Rodeo Plaza. 14 Billy Bob’s Texas-Aaron Lewis. Tickets $16, $30 & $35. Performance 10:30 p.m. www.billybobstexas.com. 817-624-7117. 2520 Rodeo Plaza. 17 Pink Floyd Experience presented by Performing Arts Fort Worth at Bass Performance Hall. This is the ultimate live experience for Floyd fans: interpretive videos, plane crashes, flying pig, and a helicopter! Journey to the dark side of the moon with a spectacular light show, full quadraphonic sound and six outstanding musicians dedicated to bringing you the most authentic Floyd experience possible. Performance 7:30 p.m. Ticket prices vary. For more information, ticket office 817-212-4280, www.basshall.com. 525 Commerce St. 20 Billy Bob’s Texas-Bart Crow Band. Tickets $12 & $16. Performance 10:30 p.m. www.billybobstexas.com. 817-624-7117. 2520 Rodeo Plaza.


20-22 Beethoven’s Fifth performed by the Fort Worth Symphony Orchestra at Bass Performance Hall. The Symphony opens the concert with Richard Strauss’ virtuosic tone poem, Don Juan, and closes with Beethoven’s beloved and awe-inspiring Fifth symphony. Performance times and prices vary. For more information, ticket office 817-212-4280, www.basshall.com. 525 Commerce St. 20-22 Goodguys 5th Spring Lone Star Nationals at the Texas Motor Speedway. This giant hot rod & custom car festival offers full throttle fun with more than 2,000 hot rods, customs, classics, street rods, muscle cars & trick trucks through 1972 vintage nestled into the infield of the Texas Motor Speedway. The festival includes vendor exhibits, a swap meet and cars-for-sale area, and special “themed” parking areas. $20 adults, $6 children 7-12, FREE for 6 & under. Advance adult admission tickets can be purchased for $17 at www.good-guys.com. Texas Motor Speedway, 3545 Lone Star Circle. 21 Billy Bob’s Texas-Jerrod Niemann. Tickets $16 & $22. Performance 10:30 p.m. www.billybobstexas.com. 817-624-7117. 2520 Rodeo Plaza. 26 Billy Bob’s Texas-Fort Worth Food + Wine Festival BBQ Bash featuring Wade Bowen. What better way to kick-off the 2015 FWFWF than with Texas’ most iconic food at the World’s Largest Honky-Tonk? A dozen of Texas’ best pit-masters celebrate the festival launch by sharing their savory, smoked treasures. Look for great barbecueworthy beverages…and be sure to wear your favorite boots for dancing. Tickets $15-$60. Doors open 6 p.m., live music 9 p.m. www.billybobstexas.com. 817-624-7117. 2520 Rodeo Plaza. 26-29 Fort Worth Wine and Food Festival. The four-day foodie extravaganza honors the distinctive nature of Fort Worth cooking, food, beverage and culinary traditions. Guests 21 and over are invited to events that infuse historic venues, homegrown flavors, celebrated local chefs, culinary professionals and wine makers

into one taste-filled weekend. The signature events are held at various venues around Forth Worth and ticket package prices vary. For more information on events, venues and package options, www.fortworthfoodandwinefestival.com. 27 Billy Bob’s Texas-REO Speedwagon. Tickets $20, $40 & $50. Performance 10:30 p.m. www.billybobstexas.com. 817-624-7117. 2520 Rodeo Plaza. 27-April 12 Becky’s New Car at Theatre Arlington. Middle-aged Becky is caught in middle management and a mediocre marriage. Then one day, a grief-stricken millionaire offers her a shiny new life! The audience gets to ride shotgun in a thoroughly original comedy that is a delightful romp down the road not taken. Tickets $20. Performances Fri.-Sat. 7:30 p.m. & Sat-Sun. 2 p.m. For more information, www.theatrearlington. org, 817-275-7661. 305 W. Main St., Arlington, TX 76010. 28 Mary Chapin Carpenter with special guest Aoife O’Donovan presented by Performing Arts Fort Worth at Bass Performance Hall. Fivetime Grammy Award-winning singer-songwriter and 2012 Nashville Songwriters Hall of Fame inductee Mary Chapin Carpenter will embark on a unique series of intimate, acoustic performances. Performance 7:30 p.m. Ticket prices vary. For more information, ticket office 817-212-4280, www.basshall.com. 525 Commerce St. 28 Billy Bob’s Texas-Martina McBride. Tickets $20, $40, $50 & $6 0. Performance 10:30 p.m. www.billybobstexas.com. 817-624-7117. 2520 Rodeo Plaza. Coming May 18-24 The 2015 Crowne Plaza Invitational-The golf tourney goliath returns to the Colonial Country Club in Fort Worth to celebrate its 69th anniversary. The prestigious Tour event draws top players from all over the world. Defending champion Adam Scott will take on all challengers for the $6.5 million purse. Tickets must be purchased in advance. For more information, call 817-927-4280, www.CrownePlazaInvitational.com.

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Sundance Square Area

FORT WORTH N. MAIN ST

AREA VISITOR'S GUIDE

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COPYRIGHT 2015, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MAP MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM, NOR ANY PORTION THEREOF.

A. TARRANT COUNTY COURT HOUSE B. RENAISSANCE WORTHINGTON HOTEL C. WELLS FARGO TOWER D. SHOPS, DINING, MUSEUM, ART GALLERIES, LIVE THEATERS, E. RESTAURANTS F. SHOPS, DINING, MUSEUMS, GALLERIES, FT WORTH CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU

G. AMC THEATRES, DINING H. PUBLIC PARKING — FREE PARKING AFTER 5 PM & WEEKENDS I. THE TOWER CONDOMINIUMS J. NANCY LEE & PERRY R. BASS PERFORMANCE HALL K. FIRE STATION #1 L. DR HORTON TOWER

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COMMUNITY ARTS CENTER

KIMBELL ART MUSEUM

CROCKETT

NORWOOD

IE W BO

AMON CARTER MUSEUM

VAN CLIBURN WAY

MP CA

D AR EV UL BO

WILL ROGERS

Cultural District

MODERN ART MUSEUM OF FORT WORTH

UNIVERSITY DR

BOLAND

CLIFTON

MONTGOMERY ST

Y RC DA

WEST 7TH ST


26TH ST

NORTHWEST

NORTH MAIN ST

27TH ST

NORTHWEST 28TH ST

183

ELLIS AVE

1. BILLY BOB'S TEXAS 2. THE SHOPPES ON RODEO PLAZA 3. STOCKYARDS HOTEL 4. COWTOWN COLISEUM 5. LIVESTOCK EXCHANGE 6. STOCKYARDS MUSEUM 7. TEXAS COWBOY HALL OF FAME 8. VISITOR INFORMATION CENTER 9. HYATT PLACE HOTEL 10. STOCKYARDS STATION (GRAPEVINE VINTAGE RAILROAD)

BLVD

STOCKYARDS

Fort Worth Stockyards

1

National Historic District

RODEO PLAZA

2

NORTHWEST 25TH ST

3

CATTLE PENS

4

5 6 E. EXCHANGE AVE

MULE ALLEY

SAUNDERS PARK W. EXCHANGE AVE

TARRANT COUNTY COURT HOUSE

S NE JO

ST

SUNDANCE SQUARE

T

ST

RETRO COWBOY

Downtown

C

T

H 5T

H 6T

ST

H 7T

D

T

N TO HIL

A FORT WORTH CONVENTION & VISITORS BUREAU B COURTYARD BY MARRIOTT, BLACKSTONE C EMBASSY SUITES D ASHTON HOTEL

ST

ST

B

N OU LH CA

ST

OR YL TA

R MA LA

ST

ST N TO US ON HO RT MO CK RO TH ST

A

280

ST

H 4T

T TS ET RN BU

ST

N SO ER ND HE

ST

5TH ST

T

TO/FROM MARRIOTT TOWNEPLACE SUITES EVERY 10 MINUTES 6 P.M.-10 P.M.

ST

D 3R

T

 IN MA

T 'S TA ET ACE PL

ST

CE EN OR FL

RY ER CH

D OR RF HE T EA W

T

ST

D 2N

CE ER MM CO

AP KN EL .B W

BOARDING/ALIGHTING, MOLLY STOPS EVERY 10 MINUTES 10 A.M.-10 P.M.

ST

T 1S

SID RICHARDSON MUSEUM

FORT WORTH

MARRIOTT TOWNEPLACE SUITES

E OV GR

IN MA

T

H RT NO

T FS UF BL

LAGRAVE FIELD

81

10

9

HORSE & MULE BARNS

RENAISSANCE WORTHINGTON HOTEL

35 w

8

7

ST

H 8T

T

ST

H 9T

E FT WORTH INTERMODAL TRANSPORTATION CENTER F ASHTON DEPOT G RAIL PASSENGER STATION

ST

E

T

W. 7TH ST

T

TH 13

OMNI HOTEL

WATER GARDENS

FORT WORTH

AREA VISITOR'S GUIDE

30

®

T

G ST

TH 16

ST

SHERATON HOTEL & SPA

CE ER MM CO

SUMMIT

PENN ST.

W. LANCASTER AVE

COPYRIGHT 2015, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MAP MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM, NOR ANY PORTION THEREOF.

F ST

TH 15

TH 15

E. LANCASTER AVE

ST

TH 14

T

ST

HOLIDAY INN EXPRESS

ST

ST

JENNINGS AVE

MONROE

TAYLOR ST

LAMAR ST

BURNETT ST

CHERRY ST

13TH

MACON ST

FOLRENCE ST

HENDERSON ST

TEXAS

ST

TH 12

10TH

PARK CENTRAL INN

FORT WORTH CONVENTION CENTER

T

TO ARLINGTON & DALLAS SIX FLAGS OVER TEXAS HURRICANE HARBOR, GLOBE LIFE PARK IN ARLINGTON, AT&T STADIUM

POST OFFICE

THE DISTANCE BETWEEN SOME LOCATIONS ON THIS MAP ARE NOT ACCURATE. IT HAS BEEN ALTERED TO EMPHASIZE CERTAIN AREAS MORE PROMINENTLY.

35 w 81

30


SPUR

496

▲ TO ALLIANCE AIRPORT, TEXAS MOTOR SPEEDWAY & DENTON

FA LL S

35 w

287

NORTH BEACH ST

▼ W TO IC H IT A

81

156

OLD DECATUR RD

BOAT CLUB RD

Eagle Mountain Lake

199

377

MID-C

WATAUGA RD

R

1220 BLUE MOUND RD

O R O B S K C JA

FORT WORTH NATURE CENTER & REFUGE

Y W H

820 MEACHAM FIELD

M MEACHA BLVD

35 w

AZ LE AV E

Lake Worth

N. E.

287

28TH ST

•FORT WORTH

183

STOCKYARDS

199

81

IN MA

WHITE SETTLEMENT ROAD

377

COLONIAL

TCU BERRY ST

FORT WORTH ZOO

183 20

R D

G R A N B U R Y

BR YA NT

IR VI N

R O S E G LE N & G R A N B U R Y

820

ALTA

MESA BLVD

SY C AMO COLUMBUS

RE

L RD SCHOO

CROWLEY RD

TO

287

SPUR

496

20

Benbrook Lake

81

SEMINARY DR

HULEN MALL

DIRK S DR

BERRY ST

FORT WORTH

20

EVE RM AN

FOREST HILL

820

35 w

McCART

20

ROSEDALE

WICH ITA ST

 TO WEATHERFORD

377

80

HEMPHILL ST

FORT WORTH

SOU TH H ULE N

80

30

LANCASTER

8TH AVE

RIDGMAR MALL

VD BL

UNIVERSITY DR

AL TA

M ER E

7TH ST

WIE BO MP CA

30

30

ST

183

377

LAGRAVE FIELD

BEACH ST

R VE RI

. VD BL

SOUTH FREEWAY

NAS JOINT RESERVE BASE

820

S AK O

PKWY

Lake Granbury

®

CROWLEY

731

N O D EN R

AREA VISITOR'S GUIDE

35 w TO BURLESON AND WACO 


GRAPEVINE

KELLER DA VIS BL VD

114

114 26

DALLAS FORT WORTH INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT

121

CHEEK SPARGER ROAD

MID-CITIES BLVD

BEDFORD

NORTH RICHLAND HILLS

HURST 121

157

183

TO  DALLAS

10 D T BLV HURS

10

161

157

121

360

LAMAR

RD

ST COOPER

•AT&T STADIUM

SUBLETT RD

LD IE SF AN M Y W H

FM

287

1382 180

303

TRADER'S VILLAGE

Joe Pool Lake

COO PER ST

496

GRAND PRAIRIE

360

FT. WORTH SUBURBAN MAP

MANSFIELD TO WAXAHACHIE 

TO DALLAS

20

157

157 SPUR

MATLOCK

0

BLVD

HIGHLANDS • ARLINGTON

RD

GREEN OAKS BLVD

161

KWY R P PIONE E

ARLINGTON

THE PARKS

360

ARKANSAS LN

• MALL

20

SIX FLAGS MALL

GLOBE LIFE PARK IN ARLINGTON

ARBROOK

30

GREAT SO UTHWEST PKWY

Lake Arlington

SIX • •FLAGS •

ARLINGTON CONVENTION MILL RD CENTER

ST

820

303 CO OP ER

T

COLLINS ST

GREEN OAKS BLVD

PARK ROW

FIELDER

RANDOL

80

LOUIS TUSSAUD'S PALACE OF WAX & RIPLEY'S BELIEVE IT OR NOT!

HURRICANE HARBOR

30

N ST DIVISIO

CAR RI VERIZON THEATRE E

BALLPA RK WAY

N EE GR

VD BL KS OA

R

820

LONE STAR PARK AT GRAND PRAIRIE

CARRIER

EAST MALL

183

IRVING 183

•NORTH

26

EULESS

161

BELT LINE RD

MID-CITIES BLVD

360 INTERNATIONAL PKWY

H W Y G R AP EV IN E

1938

PRECINT LINE RD

COLLEYVILLE

7

7

121

COPYRIGHT 2015, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. THIS MAP MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM, NOR ANY PORTION THEREOF.


On Friday, March 20 and Saturday, March 21, bring someone special or grab a group of your best girlfriends for Grapevine’s Jazz Wine Train. Tickets are $59 per person and include Grapevine wines, hors d’oeuvres and desserts, a souvenir wine glass, and live jazz entertainment. Riders must be 21 and up. To purchase your tickets, visit www.GrapevineTexasUSA. com/JazzWineTrains. Open through April 22, the “Peanuts… Naturally” exhibit in Grapevine’s Tower Gallery takes a lighthearted look at Charles Schulz’s exploration of the natural world through “Peanuts” comic strips, videos, objects, and interactive stations. Visitors get a “Peanuts”-eye view of the universe, “web of nature,” trees, birds, the elements (snow, wind, rain and clouds), gardening through Charlie Brown’s escapades. Activity stations allow children of all ages, from pre-school to adults, to learn more about and appreciate the wonders of the natural world. The Tower Gallery is located at 636 S. Main St., Grapevine. Admission is free. Visit www.GrapevineMusuems. com for details. For a complete listing of restaurants, events and activities in Grapevine visit www.GrapevineTexasUSA.com or call 1-800-457-6338.

Grapevine CVB March into Fun in Grapevine

By Leigh Lyons, Communications Manager, Grapevine Convention & Visitors Bureau Put a little spring in your step in Grapevine this March and experience events the whole family will enjoy. From children’s events and exhibits, to datenight fun, Grapevine offers a variety of choices to enjoy at the beginning of spring. For your spring breakers, hop aboard Spring Fling on the Grapevine Vintage Railroad! Beginning March 7 through March 15, enjoy the Grapevine Vintage Railroad’s daily 1 p.m. departure to the Fort Worth Stockyards. The Monday through Friday excursions feature games and interactive activities onboard. For tickets and additional information, visit www.GVRR.com. 705 S. Main St. Celebrate life with good jazz, fine wine, and a trip back in time aboard the Grapevine Vintage Railroad!

Gaylord Texan

Northwest Highway, W.

26

LOOP

382

BUS

Grapevine Mills

Trail lord Gay

Ruth Wall St.

®

Dooley Street, N.

AREA VISITOR'S GUIDE

Main Street, N.

FORT WORTH

Wall Street, W.

Worth St., E. Franklin St., E. College St., E. Hudgins St., E. Main St. S.

Ave.

Fort Worth

30

KEY MAGAZINE

HWY 360

I-635

HW Y1 14

HWY 183

M a r c h 2 0 1 5

121

Airfield Drive, W.

HWY 121

121

Main St.

HWY 114

I-35 E

157

• Grapevine Convention Center 114

Grapevine 360

City of

Grapevine Dallas Road

Municipal Way

HWY 121

Tanglewood

D. m e. llia e Av i W at T

BUS

114

Dallas

Texan Trail

Texas St., E.

W.

Dooley Street, S.

Ball Street

W.

Mustang Dr.

FM

26

Wall Street, E.

College Street, W.

Ira E. Woods

Bass Pro

Great Wolf Lodge

114

121

121

International Parkway

From the

Airfield Drive,

N.

DFW International Airport Grand Hyatt DFW

Hyatt Regency DFW

GRAPEVINE, TEXAS


124 E. Worth Street • Historic Downtown Grapevine, TX 76051 Call for Directions 817.481.4668 • www.esparzastexas.com

We’ve got the inside track on fun.

HOP ABOARD the Grapevine Vintage Railroad and ride between Grapevine’s Cotton Belt Depot and the Fort Worth Stockyards, or on the Stockyards Trinity River Ride. Travel in authentic 1920s Victorian-style coaches. For schedules, rates and train & depot information visit www.GVRR.com or call 817.410.3185.

GRAPEVINE, TEXAS

20169_GCVB_FW_Key_Train_March_2014_ad_v1.indd 1

March 2015

K E Y M A G A Z I N E 31 2/4/14 4:51 PM


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