AHEAD OF THE GAME
Contemporary artists tackle sports culture at San Antonio's McNay Museum

Sophie Inard’s “First base en rose,” will be displayed as part of Sport and Spectator.
A sporty new art exhibit at the McNay Art Museum in San Antonio will explore America's obsession with sports through the eyes of emerging artists. Running March 1 through July 27, "Sport and Spectator" will feature 40 sculptures, textiles, screenprints, and sport-themed installations featuring gear like punching bags, hockey sticks, basketballs, baseball bats, and tennis rackets.
Lauren Thompson, McNay's curator of exhibitions, said both sports fans and art patrons will appreciate an exhibit that celebrates sports while tracing its complicated relationship with class, gender, and race.
"'Sport and Spectator' is a unique exhibition in that it presents a diverse array of works that transform everyday sports imagery and equipment — such as playbooks, basketballs, footballs, and jerseys — into artworks, magnifying the dynamic intersection of the visual arts and sports culture," Thompson said in a statement.
The groundbreaking show features works by multi-media artists including Brandon Donahue-Shipp, Jeffrey Gibson, Raul Rene Gonzalez, Sophie Inard, Brian Jungen, Justin Korver, Esmaa Mohamoud, Betsy Odom, Hank Willis Thomas, and Tyrrell Winston.
Donahue-Shipp, who once aspired to be a pro basketball player, arranges deflated basketballs and footballs into floral arrangements, symbolizing the unfulfilled dreams of Black and Hispanic boys imagining a career in professional sports. His screenprint, Coach's Playbook, contrasts a basketball diagram with the floorplans of a courtroom in a nod to marginalized communities' struggle with the American legal system.
Many of the installations contrast rugged gear with handworked crafts. Mohamoud mixes team jerseys with silk and velvet to create ball gowns, commenting on gender perceptions in sports. Gibson adorns Everlast punching bags with glass beads to pay tribute to Native American traditions.
"Sport and Spectator" will be accompanied by interactive experiences and special events. Arcade games such as Golden Tee Golf and NBA Jam will be scattered throughout the exhibit. The museum will also host a March 16 screening of A League of Their Own and an April 6 Free Family Day, where visitors will be invited to enjoy games and other activities that promote teamwork and healthy living.
The exhibit, included with general admission, also serves as a debut for McNay's reimagined peacock mascot. The preening birds Peacocks once roamed the estate, the former home of painter Marion Koogler McNay.