Touring the Latest Reworked Structures in Nestor Topchy’s Inner Loop Compound

Buildings at Nestor Topchy's Residence, Brooke Smith, Houston

Buildings at Nestor Topchy's Residence, Brooke Smith, HoustonLocal art guide Robert Boyd takes himself and readers on a photo tour of the outbuildings surrounding Nestor Topchy’s home “just south of the North Loop,” catching readers up on a few of the structures the artist has built since (or salvaged from) his residency at the legendary TemplO (earlier, Zocalo), the 6-acre arts commune he ran on a rented former truck depot at 5223 Feagan St. in the West End from the late eighties into the early aughts. And he finds much to impress, including the glass-walled tin-roofed structure pictured here, which Topchy pieced together from steel windows and doors salvaged from buildings in Houston and Argentina, and which fronts a pond on the acre-plus property. Topchy calls it the Crescent:

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Buildings at Nestor Topchy's Residence, Brooke Smith, Houston

Next to it is the Chapel Sculpturetecture, a much smaller metal-sided contraption filled with a stove, a sink, and a shelf of icon-portraits of mostly local artists, painted by Topchy:

Buildings at Nestor Topchy's Residence, Brooke Smith, Houston

“It really is a holy place,” writes the not-always-reverent Boyd. He’s talking about the tiny chapel here: “In the cool quiet of the afternoon, communing with this shining silent community of saints, I could feel it — at least until my reverie was interrupted by other guests entering.”

Buildings at Nestor Topchy's Residence, Brooke Smith, Houston

Moving on, Boyd includes pics of a metal-sheathed trailer dubbed the Archetapas Shrine:

Buildings at Nestor Topchy's Residence, Brooke Smith, Houston

and the TemplO-refugee OHM Home, a trailer office built out of packing crates:

Buildings at Nestor Topchy's Residence, Brooke Smith, Houston

Boyd doesn’t include any photos of a new shipping-container assemblage Topchy is constructing, meant as a smaller-scale version of the giant 10-acre artist compound forged out of dozens of shipping containers called HIVE he’s been promoting for several years. But he shows a drawing of the new prototype, which Topchy modestly labels the Multivarious Utilitarian Composition:

Drawing of Shipping Container Structure at Nestor Topchy's Residence, Brooke Smith, Houston

What Topchy’s built of that is incomplete, but Boyd says it works: “Right now it’s just a couple of containers with a dogtrot, but they are functional. One even has plumbing and a tenant. He plans to build a couple of MUCs on his property and rent them as studios to other artists (similar to Independence Art Studios up in Independence Heights).”

Photos: Robert Boyd

Art Is Where You Make It

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