Review: Solos at Havu and Robischon Display Objective Ideas
Work by Yoshitomo Saito is up at William Havu Gallery, while Enrique Martínez Celaya is showing at Robischon.
Work by Yoshitomo Saito is up at William Havu Gallery, while Enrique Martínez Celaya is showing at Robischon.
Death is the subject of Will Eno’s play.
For dancer Lisa Engelken, her art form is for everybody.
Sushi, Winter on the Rocks, Wizard of Oz and more!
Sommer Browning and Esteban Peralta have opened art galleries in their garages.
Donnetta Lavinia Grays’s play got its start at the 2017 Denver Center Theatre Company’s New Play Summit.
The Broadway blockbuster will run at the Buell Theatre from August 12 to October 4.
Comedian Trevor Noah, host of The Daily Show, has announced he will be bringing his Loud and Clear Tour to Red Rocks.
Book lovers: Dog-ear these five literary events happening this week.
Artist Lindsay Smith Gustave’s work celebrates the world’s small moments, often with great detail in drawings rendered with a light touch, or in delicately beaded natural forms placed like floral specimens inside amorphous glass vessels.
You don’t have to open your wallet to enjoy yourself this week.
Street art, including wheat-pasting, can add to a building’s heritage.
Daniel Mazur is touchy-feely kind of guy on a mission to unwrap authentic experiences through introspective storytelling. As the co-founder of Soul Stories, Mazur has been proactively supporting that mission since 2013, by gathering people from the community to share a piece of their inner lives.
The husband-wife team behind Unfollower wants to tap into your fears but also empower you to overcome them.
Novelist LS Hawker talks about inspiration, music, and the winding road of a working writer.
The Denver Art Museum’s Christian Dior exhibit will now close March 17.
If the upcoming weekend presents you with nothing but empty pockets and idle time, don’t despair; we know precisely how to meet your penny-pinching and boredom-fighting entertainment needs.
It’s a good weekend to get in shape for First Friday, with an unexpectedly rich slate for the end of January. New exhibitions, lectures, arty hangouts and fond farewells all figure into the art itinerary.
Andrea Moore and Faith Vidrine are friends, and like most friends, they share an easy back-and-forth rapport when they talk about other friends and all the fun things they’ve done together and how the world works.
Emily K. Harrison has been the heart and soul of Boulder’s square product theatre since 2006, when she first took the stage under that moniker in a self-written solo performance, Skeet Shootin’ Prodigy, at the Boulder International Fringe Festival.
William Stockman, Julia Sanders and William Stoehr all display new works.
His the way things are. the way they are going to be. part three screens on January 25.