Through the Lens

Some major changes are being wrought at the Denver Art Museum. No, I’m not referring to the new wing that’s set to go up sometime in the near future. Rather, I’m talking about the shifting staff in the Modern and Contemporary department. In this game of curatorial musical chairs, there’s…

Art Beat

The Philip J. Steele Gallery in the lobby of the Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design is currently showing Andy Warhol: Endangered Species, a group of ten silkscreen prints commissioned in 1983 by New York’s Ronald Feldman Gallery. The year is significant because 1983 is just before Warhol broke…

Totally Abstract

For the last five years or so, the fine-art world has seen a major revival of interest in abstraction in its innumerable stylistic permutations. Abstraction in painting and sculpture came into its own in the first few years of the twentieth century. Its audience among artists and collectors was small…

Art Beat

The word is out: ILK on Santa Fe Drive has become a place to see some of the best little art shows in town, and the two exhibits on display right now, Christina Piña: New Paintings, and Bill Brazzell: Constructs, will do nothing but enhance that positive buzz. The first…

Variety Shows

Under the guidance of Cydney Payton, the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art has become a center for shows in which women artists figure prominently. Muscle: Power of the View, in the West Gallery, is the latest example. It will be followed by Elbows and Tea Leaves: Front Range Women in…

Art Beat

It was only this past January that Angela Rios, a former account coordinator for MCI, opened the funky little Morph Gallery in the Golden Triangle. The intimate space, which is made up of three small rooms in a tidy red brick rowhouse, is currently featuring New Show, a group effort…

The Art of Politics

The process by which an architect will be chosen to design the Denver Art Museum’s new freestanding wing is coming along nicely. A couple of weeks ago, the City Selection Committee, a mixed bag of politicos and others appointed by Mayor Wellington Webb, narrowed the list of eighteen architectural firms…

Art Beat

At the end of March, the National Council for Education in the Ceramic Arts held its annual meeting in Denver, attracting more than 3,000 of the most distinguished ceramic artists and teachers from around the country. In response, local galleries, museums and art centers staged a veritable ceramic arts festival…

Against the Grain

Denver and its suburbs are in a building boom that has been dubbed “supergrowth,” and the negative effect in terms of lost historic buildings is reaching a critical mass. It’s undeniable: Denver’s established character is being erased. From an aesthetic standpoint, the problem is twofold. First, the vast majority of…

Art Beat

Some might suggest that John McEnroe’s American Standard at the partly face-lifted ILK on Santa Fe Drive is simply a late entry to the ceramics bee still going on in the wake of the National Council for Education in the Ceramic Arts meetings held in town last month. He uses…

Hot Shots

The Colorado Photographic Arts Center has its offices and exhibition space in the Highland neighborhood in a rehabbed garage it shares with the Carol Keller Gallery. At first, Keller occupied the main rooms — converted mechanics’ bays — and the CPAC was in the smaller rooms that had been offices…

Art Beat

Exhibition director Jason Thomas keeps up the pace at the Market Street Gallery@Guiry’s by putting up one great show after another. Right now he’s highlighting two talented artists who create sculptural installations that incorporate ceramics. On the left is Strands Pathways Gravity, featuring wall-hung and floor-bound sculptures by Denver’s Martha…

Art Beat

World of New Colors, which closes Saturday at the Bayeux Gallery in the Golden Triangle, is a solo show devoted to the work of Philadelphia-based textile artist Marcia Hewitt Johnson. Johnson creates geometric abstractions with pieces of cloth joined together using quilt-making techniques, as in the two-panel “New York New…

Real and Imagined

Well, after two years of local preparation, the National Council for Education in the Ceramic Arts 2000 meeting came and went last week in only a few days. But if NCECA’s gone, it’s not forgotten. Temporary though it may be, it’s left behind a legacy in the form of more…

Art Beat

The modest Philip J. Steele Gallery does double duty as the entry lobby for the Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design. But despite this limitation, it’s often a place to see interesting shows put together by gallery director Lisa Spivak. The current show makes the case. Richard Notkin: Passages:…

Mile High Fires

It seems like the entire art world has gone potty. Denver’s curators and gallery directors alike are crazed these days, since there are more than fifty local art exhibits in which ceramics take center stage going on right now. It’s enough to make our heads spin like a kick wheel…

Art Beat

The cryptic phantom institution the Invisible Museum is currently presenting No Zone, sponsored by the Goldfarb Foundation. It’s the second of three exhibits from the IM to be presented at the Market Street Gallery at Guiry’s. The last time, the subject was small abstract sculpture; this time it’s experimental photography…

Wide Open

A new day has very apparently dawned at the still-nascent Museum of Contemporary Art Denver, which is housed in a former fish market in Sakura Square. And the many changes are obvious from the moment visitors hit the brand-new front doors. Some may recall that I have relentlessly criticized MoCAD…

Art Beat

The turn of the century has put many people in the art world in a retrospective mood, but there are some dealers in the city who are way ahead of the pack — they’ve been looking back at local art history for years. One of these dealers is Elizabeth Schlosser,…

Say It in French

The unbelievably good Matisse From the Baltimore Museum of Art, which opens to the general public on Sunday at the Denver Art Museum, is the third and final exhibit in a series of blockbusters there that have showcased the School of Paris. It is, hands down, the finest of the…

Art Beat

Right now at the Edge Gallery, there’s a quartet of very different shows, each of which has its own strengths and weaknesses. In the entry gallery is Theresa Ducayet: Architectural Textile, in which the artist combines sculptures and sewn silk-and-paper collages. The silk collages have small scraps of maps or…

Scene Changes

There are big changes afoot at the little Mizel Museum of Judaica. First, the impending remodel of the BJ-BMH Synagogue, where it is housed, may put the museum out on the street, or at least into storage, and force it to cancel its upcoming schedule. The proposed design for the…