De Jesus/Staff Show More Show Less 13 of25 Australian artist Amanda Parer's monumental installation "Intrude" is being exhibited in downtown Houston until Saturday, May 14, 2016. According to the artist's website, rabbits were introduced to Australia by settlers in 1788 and they have caused great imbalance to Australia environment. The public art exhibition consists of several inflatable creatures that resemble rabbits, which in Parer's native Australia are an invasive species. De Jesus/Staff Show More Show Less 12 of25 Australian artist Amanda Parer's monumental installation "Intrude" is being exhibited in downtown Houston until Saturday, May 14, 2016. De Jesus/Staff Show More Show Less 11 of25 Glenn Parizot enjoys Australian artist Amanda Parer's monumental installation "Intrude" during lunch hour in downtown Houston, Tuesday, May 10, 2016, in Houston. The ladies walked a block to take a closer look at the bunnies and for photos. (left to right) Virjinia Hadjieva, Erika Arredondo, and Wynne Chan gather for a selfie by Australian artist Amanda Parer's monumental installation "Intrude" in downtown Houston, Tuesday, May 10, 2016, in Houston. Molly Glentzer Show More Show Less 10 of25 Set within a window of the old Sakowitz building downtown, it's part of the Art Blocks at Main Street Square civic art project. Molly Glentzer Show More Show Less 9 of25 Yes Yes No's "Mas Que La Cara"works with motion detection software that  reads your image, reflects it and makes patterns that morph into colorful art. It's on view through June, one of four marquee installations that are part of the Art Blocks at Main Street Square. Molly Glentzer Show More Show Less 8 of25 Houston artist Jamal Cyrus' "Lightnin' Field" commemorates Houston blues musician Lightnin' Hopkins and Liberty Hall. Molly Glentzer Show More Show Less 7 of25 Patrick Renner's "Trumpet Flower" on Main Street doubles as a canopy. ( Jon Shapley / Houston Chronicle ) Jon Shapley Jon Shapley/Staff Show More Show Less 6 of25 Restored sculptures by Floyd Newsum, Jessica Stockholder's "Color Jam Houston" installation and Patrick Renner's "Trumpet Flower" are on view near the corner of Main and McKinney. ( Jon Shapley / Houston Chronicle ) Jon Shapley Jon Shapley/Staff Show More Show Less 5 of25 Jessica Stockholder's Main Street Square project is seen Saturday, March 5, 2016, in Houston. Jon Shapley Jon Shapley/Staff Show More Show Less 4 of25 A cyclist passes by Jessica Stockholder's Main Street Square project Saturday, March 5, 2016, in Houston. ( Melissa Phillip / Houston Chronicle ) Melissa Phillip/Staff Show More Show Less 3 of25 Artist Jessica Stockholder stands near her Art Blocks piece at Main Street Square. Built in1927, it was the City of Houstonés first underground drinking-water reservoir- a concrete holding tank roughly the size of one and half football fields on Sabine Street, near Buffalo Bayou. Courtesy of the artists Show More Show Less 2 of25 The inside of the Buffalo Bayou Park Cistern is shown Monday, April 25, 2016, in Houston. 1 of25 YesYesNo's "mas que la cara (more than the face)" uses facial-recognition software to interact with passers-by as part of the Downtown District's Art Blocks at Main Street Square project.
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