Best Contemporary Ceramics — Ensemble

BECAUSE THE EARTH IS 1/3 DIRT, which just closed at the University of Colorado Art Museum on the Boulder campus, featured an international array of contemporary ceramic artists. Participants were invited by a committee made up of CUAM director Lisa Tamiris Becker and three members of CU’s art faculty: Scott…

Best Contemporary Ceramics — Solo

The retrospective Zamantakis: From the Earth, which was ensconced during the holidays at the Victoria H. Myhren Gallery on the campus of the University of Denver, was a major retrospective examining the fifty-year-plus career of one of the most important potters in the state. DU was an appropriate venue for…

Best Gallery for Kids

Youngsters are the real stars at PlatteForum, even though some of the biggest names in the local art world are artists in residence. Sculptors, painters, dancers and other representatives of the arts work with local classrooms to develop collaborative cultural projects, and when they’re finished, PlatteForum gives the kids –…

Best New Festival — City

In a town where most of the street festivals have become indistinguishable, the Larimer Arts Association came up with something completely different last year: In the great Renaissance tradition, the group invited artists of all levels to decorate the sidewalk with chalk art. Over two days, the corridor became a…

Best New Festival — Mountains

With at least twenty music festivals already on the roster, Colorado didn’t really need another. But the founders of Blues From the Top believed wholeheartedly that Grand County needed a dose of the blues, so last year they debuted a two-day extravaganza at SolVista Golf and Ski Ranch, just two…

Best Ride

The quaint town of Lyons, on the St. Vrain River, has numerous low-key attractions, including Oskar Blues, a first-rate blues-and-brews club that’s even received shout-outs from Rolling Stone. Live acts range from members of the Colorado Blues Society to Pinetop Perkins, all augmented nicely by a Cajun-flavored menu and house-brewed…

Best Reason to Drive to Central City

Last summer, the Central City Opera featured L’Italiana en Algeri, Gabriel’s Daughter — an original production based on the life of the first female freed slave in gold rush Colorado — and an evening that combined the famed and familiar I Pagliacci and the rarely performed Goyescas. L’Italiana was laugh-out-loud…

Best Reason to Go to Arvada

Arvada is still recovering from the cultural jolt thrown by brothers Adam, Matthew and Jeremy DeGraff, who opened the D Note in sleepy Old Town last year. The Brothers D combined their aesthetic and business senses to produce one of the most eclectic and appealing rooms in town — part…

Best Girl Group

Next time you wander into the Thin Man on a Monday night, head for the couches at the back of the narrow bar, where you’ll find the chatty chicks of “Stitch and Bitch” knitting away. An informal gathering that attracts anywhere from four to thirty gals each week, these friendly…

Best Ladies’ Night

Artist/illustrator Michelle Barnes and club-marketing maven Paulina Szafranski know that women are complex creatures. Sure, they want culture and companionship, inspiration and ideas — but they also like to have their hair played with and get their nails done. Every Thursday, Barnes and Szafranski host Girls’ Night Out at Mynt…

Best Karaoke Night

The atmosphere at Armida’s is so calming and amiable that it prompts even everyday patrons to step up to the mike Wednesday through Sunday nights. The disc jockeys are friendly and are happy to accommodate the most absurd request for songs, whether it comes from longtime karaoke heroes or first-time…

Best Salsa Night

Mercury Cafe 2199 California St. 303-294-9281 Salsa dancing is not for the meek: The moves are aerobic, and the music is full of frenetic polyrhythms and enough syncopation to make your head spin. But throwing your dancing shoe into the salsa ring is a lot less intimidating at the Mercury…

Best Drag Show

Producer/director Aaron Hunter prefers the term “female impersonator” to “drag queen.” Either way, his new Starz Cabaret show is royal. Modeled on high-camp, high-glam productions in Vegas and Chicago, Starz Cabaret opened in February and features a revolving cast of performers who ape only the most deserving divas. When Whitney,…

Best Place to See State Legislators in Bondage

Debating hefty issues such as water use, growth control and the state budget may feel like a form of self-flagellation for lawmakers, but for the real thing, Rise Nightclub offers naughty Denverites of all political persuasions a chance to crack the whip. On a normal night at Rise, there’s enough…

Best Radioactive Philanthropist

Like all good philanthropists, Nuclia Waste raises a little awareness and dough for non-profit projects, but Nuclia does it right with radioactive flair and space-tastic style. Whether it’s her annual Misfit Toys variety show and toy drop for needy kids or her annual Project Angel Heart fundraiser (and celebration of…

Best Free Entertainment

We miss the old 16th Street Mall. We miss Skip and Amy, the nail-in-nose panhandlers. We miss the skaters at Skyline. We miss the homeless people, who are increasingly being pushed out by metro boosters who don’t want to scare away tourists. We miss them because if there is one…

Best Early-Morning Happy Hour

Barry Melnick had been slingin’ suds for the Zephyr Lounge’s early-morning crowds for 56 years when he was sidelined last spring by a car accident and heart attack. Now his son, Myron, is keeping the Zephyr’s 7 a.m. happy hour alive. With the nearby Fitzsimons campus being redeveloped into a…

Best Dadaist Bathroom Graffiti

When the first Dada Manifesto was ratified in Zurich on July 14, 1916, little did Hugo Ball and company know that one day their revolutionary aesthetic philosophy would wind up being applied to the grimy wall of Gabor’s men’s room. In perfect accord with the Dadaists’ credo of contradiction and…

Beauty, Strength and Weirdness

Bill Havu, director of his namesake William Havu Gallery, has taken an interesting observation and turned it into an excellent show. After noticing that many mid-career artists across the country were creating paintings inspired by abstract expressionism, Havu came up with Wet Paint, a marvelous group effort that examines the…

Artbeat

Dorothea Dunlop was a notable Denver-born sculptor whose long career spanned the past forty years. She died on February 19 at age ninety, of complications from a stroke. Reflecting the mores of the era in which she lived, Dunlop had been a full-time wife and mother before she turned to…

Now Showing

BECAUSE THE EARTH IS 1/3 DIRT. The CU Art Museum on the University of Colorado’s Boulder campus is an unlikely setting for a blockbuster contemporary ceramics exhibit — but here it is, anyway. The show was curated by a committee that included museum director Lisa Tamiris Becker and CU art…

Light but Right

Boulder’s Dinner Theatre changed hands last fall. It was sold by founder-director Ross Haley to local neurosurgeon Dr. Gene Bolles and his wife, Judy; they hired a new artistic director, Michael J. Duran — who, just coincidentally, starred in the BDT’s first-ever production 27 years ago. Which — just coincidentally…