The Ten Best Film Events in Denver in May
From video games to Star Wars on the Rocks, Denver boasts an array of cinematic delights this month.
From video games to Star Wars on the Rocks, Denver boasts an array of cinematic delights this month.
With warmer weather on the horizon, it’s time to really start loading up that social calendar. And this week has plenty to do, from Derby parties to May the Fourth celebrations and Cinco de Mayo.
May the Fourth be with you.
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.
Tickets go on sale Tuesday, May 1.
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.
Good things can come in small packages.
You can see everything from comedy to classical music in Denver without opening your wallet.
Red Rocks has scenery and a drum circle this Sunday.
Outside the soon-to-open Mirus Gallery on a warm April day, Art Poesia, a hefty man in a baggy winter coat, unloads a U-Haul truck full of large-scale abstract paintings.
Viva la Sirena at the Museo de las Americas offered a modern twist on the Pachuca legacy.
Looking for a road-bike challenge this summer? Here’s your guide.
Another weekend nears in Denver, and the city’s citizens are eager to make the most of the warming climes by getting out to explore the Mile High
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.
At Pirate, Judith Grey looks at housekeeping, while Laura Phelps Rogers brings the outdoors inside.
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which runs the Academy Awards, has granted $10,000 to the Denver Film Society, to support its CineLatino programming.
Westword caught up with Brooks to discuss nerddom’s changing landscape, networking at DiNK and Mother F**ker in a Cape’s upcoming series of episodes discussing sexual harassment in the comics community.
Nancy Smith launched Frequent Flyers Aerial Dance in 1988, never knowing whether or not she’d one day be celebrating its thirtieth anniversary.
Told through the unique lens of this Latinx family, Vida is a statement on upward mobility and the privilege of being able to outgrow your home
Denver’s voracious development has been eating up studio and art-collective spaces.
The House of Tomorrow sticks to a time-tested coming-of-age template that’s as common in the indie world as the superhero origin story is in the studio world