Six Things for Art Lovers to Do and See This Weekend in Denver
It’s a busy weekend for art galleries in Denver.
It’s a busy weekend for art galleries in Denver.
One-time Denver deputy district attorney Jennifer Mosquera walked away from her career in law to follow her muse as an artist.
Christy Thacker is putting her blood, sweat and tears into Birdy
Max Kauffman’s work is expansive.
Your guide to Denver’s art scene.
Interdisciplinary and in touch with nature and her surroundings, Jess Webb segues between music, performance and installation easily, while searching for ways to connect artists with audiences in a community-minded way.
Forget the big box stores. Do your shopping at these summer flea markets.
First Friday weekend is garden of artsy delights in Denver and along the Front Range, with a good mix of art that will charm you, confound you and move you to action.
Steven Gordon of ANIMAL/object passed away on April 30. Before he died, he completed the 100 Colorado Creatives questionnaire.
From video games to Star Wars on the Rocks, Denver boasts an array of cinematic delights this month.
Jordan Knecht is interdisciplinary art in motion—as he tells us below, he relies on whatever tools he can master as a means to an end, whether it’s for multimedia installations, fine art, performance art, making music, making noise and often, for a combination of all of the above and more.
Executive director Lucille Ruibal Rivera announced last week that the gallery would be vacating its current location at 772-774 Santa Fe Drive, and was presumably ready to move about six blocks south, to a location with less visibility but more space.
Digital virtual-reality artist Android Jones is 100 percent a product of Boulder County, born and bred in Lyons and infused with a deeply rooted Boulderite’s spiritual, new-agey, burner’s sensibility.
Sometimes you have to go the extra mile to see great art.
Nancy Smith launched Frequent Flyers Aerial Dance in 1988, never knowing whether or not she’d one day be celebrating its thirtieth anniversary.
Fallene Wells runs her Uptown salon, Let Em Have It, as a Green Circle- and B Corp-certified corporation.
Leon was never a selling gallery.
Pesha Rudnick believes in quality theater without constraints and prefers working with the shock of the new, rather than the tried-and-true popular canon.
It feels like community week at Denver’s galleries.
Curatorial genius comes naturally to Jina Brenneman, who has a knack for making exhibits that attract new and unexpected audiences, but that also serve the traditional ones.
Erin K. Barnes is a born writer, but as she discusses below, she’s also a synesthete, whose mixed-up senses serve as a gateway to multiple creative mediums.
Don’t let the weekend pass you by without a stop at these galleries and exhibits.