SUDDEN SHUTTERS
San Antonio's Brick at Blue Star faces closure after 12 years

Brick at Blue Star is one of the most popular stops during Southtown's First Fridays.
San Antonio’s First Friday might feel very different when it returns on March 6. Brick at Blue Star, one of the most popular stops of the monthly Southtown art crawl, is facing a permanent closure over alleged unpaid rent and back taxes.
A sign taped to the door says the long-running venue is “closed until further notice.” Although a request for more information was not immediately returned, owner Elizabeth Ciarfeo told MySA that she received a lockout notice for the space on February 9.
The temporary closure comes as the business faces a mountain of debt that has accrued after COVID-19. In addition to back rent, Ciarfeo says she owes $18,000 in taxes, an amount she plans to dispute.
In addition, Brick weathered backlash in early February from a group of former employees who said they were owed wages. The issue prompted a brief boycott campaign, but in a February 11 Instagram statement, organizers said the outstanding earnings have now been paid in full.
"The employee thing ... that's been paid off," Ciarfeo told MySA. "Rent has not been paid, and my landlord deserves to be paid. He does, and I just can't. And so until that time I do come up with the money, I believe from the lockout notice that it will stay locked out. I probably think that it could be the end for Brick. It would take a miracle — let's put it that way — or somebody with deep pockets to come in and take it over."
Brick opened in the Blue Star Arts Complex in 2014, offering a “blank canvas” for a variety of visual and performance arts, fashion shows, pop-up dinners, and weddings. Its regular vendor markets were among the most popular in San Antonio, hosting a variety of independent artists, vintage sellers, local designers, and artisans.
So far, Brick has not issued a public statement on its social channels. CultureMap will update this article should Ciarfeo provide any further information.

This 18th century Peruvian chest features embossed leather and iron fittings.Photo courtesy of San Antonio Museum of Art






