Ten Things to Do In and Around Denver (and Online) This Weekend
Get in from the cold and online.
Get in from the cold and online.
Denver Film has announced both drive-in and amphitheater screenings at Red Rocks.
The play opens April 16 at the Aurora Fox Arts Center.
Katy Batsel is a dreamer, wielding needle and thread to imagine a better world for herself and her queer community.
Martin J. Smith’s Going to Trinidad chronicles the history of the former gender-confirmation surgery capital of the world.
The annual festival is back for its second online edition, with documentaries and lighthearted narratives too.
Austin Zucchini-Fowler’s mural at East Colfax Avenue and Williams Street is being auctioned off as an NFT.
Enjoy a concert and conversation about the hidden Jewish traditions of the Southwest.
In a documentary-theater production, a Boulder company documents COVID-19, the racial justice movement and the trials of 2020.
Hillary Leftwich has launched a business to help her fellow writers out.
You’ve got the whole world in your hands.
Littleton transcendental dance company is back on its toes.
Even Itchy-O is going virtual.
Enjoy art by Salvador Dalí, Sherry Wiggins and more.
Blockbuster musicals are slated for 2022.
Where else but next door to the neighborhood formerly known as Stapleton would one find a whole bookstore just for kids?
A newcomer to Colorado, artist Christine Nguyen has a resume that boasts an international reach as big as the cosmos that inspires her.
The cartoonist takes a dive into the history and culture of Denver’s architecture and culture.
Get out of the house!
Downtown is back in play.
His play premieres at Miners Alley in April.
Another First Friday is rolling in, this time with the promise of true spring weather. Enjoy a pleasant evening and greet April at a wild assortment of new shows at co-ops, commercial galleries, artist studios, and immersive and outdoor spaces. Scottie Burgess, brands / power /objects / urban / tribes Vinni…