Drink It In

According to Kevin Hart, producer of the Drunken Bachelor Talk Show, “there’s a real paucity of drinking-driven shows.” So he and comedian hosts Michael Collins and Eric Mather decided to rectify that situation a few years back by launching their own retro-style variety show. Hart, Collins and Mather designed the…

Stage Right

There aren’t many outlets for local playwrights in Denver, but Rick Yaconis, artistic director of Edge Theater Company, is determined to change that. This is the second year for the company’s On the Edge: A Festival of New Plays. “We wanted to diversify our programming and make a commitment to…

On the Hot Seat

In 1944, Lena Baker became the only woman ever to die in the electric chair in the state of Georgia. The black woman with a checkered past was sentenced to death by a jury of white men during a five-hour trial for killing her white employer — and abusive lover…

Light Bright

The photogram, or “cameraless photography,” one of the most primitive photographic techniques, first gained attention in the 1930s through the experimentation of artists like Man Ray, László Moholy-Nagy, Pablo Picasso and others, who made images by placing and exposing objects directly on light-sensitive material, leaving a negative image behind. More…

Separating Science from Fiction

Ever wonder just how much real science is in your favorite science-fiction films? Thanks to the Denver Film Society and the Denver Museum of Nature & Science — who are teaming up for their fourth annual Sci-Fi Film Series — you’re going to find out. The series presents some of…

Dance Fever

Superlatives are handed out way too often in the arts, but you can’t avoid them when describing the Vail International Dance Festival, which every year stages two weeks of dance ranging from classical ballet to contemporary to performances by artists from such shows as Dancing With the Stars. Director Damian…

A Bard Life

Sam Gregory, one of the most interesting and talented actors around, began his professional life working for the California Shakespeare Theater soon after graduating from college. “I made $50 a week,” he says. “Maybe $43.37 after taxes.” This summer, Gregory returns for his third season with the Colorado Shakespeare Festival,…

The Reel Thing

While it’s not unusual these days to find an artist moving from medium to medium with ease, Paul Sietsema seems to do it in a completely original way, says MCA Denver curator Nora Burnett Abrams, who has just finished pulling together the exhibition Paul Sietsema: Films and Works. The show…

Top ten queer films — a countdown in honor of Cinema Q

Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender cinema is becoming the new norm, according to Denver Film Society programmer Matthew Campbell: Festivals such as Sundance now feature films about LGBT characters who are fully fleshed out and whose stories have less to do with their sexual identity, he points out. Marriage and…

Can’t make the Louvre this summer? Take a quick trip to DIA!

When people travel through Denver International Airport, they’re rarely thinking about the art there. Typically, a travelers are more concerned with cramming McDonald’s hash browns into their kids’ mouths and getting to the gate without a mental breakdown than they are with marveling at the artwork in the terminal. But…

Playbill: This week’s Denver-area dance and drama picks

Summer is a mixed bag at metro-area stages, where the local companies entertain with audience-friendly fare, new play festivals and Shakespeare under the stars. And there’s more, so what will you see this weekend? Here are a few ideas. See also: Dance Fever: The Vail International Dance Festival…

Celebrate the save of the Mayan Theatre at a free program Friday

With Broadway now the center of the hipster universe, it’s hard to remember that time thirty years ago when Denver’s once gleaming “Miracle Mile” — a stretch of streamlined stores and car dealerships — had devolved into a malevolent mile of boarded-up storefronts, decrepit hotels and vacant lots. The area…

Review: Outside in 303 tells a real west side story

Outside in 303, the main summer feature at the Museo de las Americas, is absolutely spectacular, and makes a real contribution to local art literacy by revealing a scene of Latino taggers that has been more or less hidden from the rest of the art world — though their efforts…

Paper Work a cut above at Center for Visual Art

For Paper Work, Cecily Cullen, the creative director at Metropolitan State University’s Center for Visual Art, has put together an exhibit that surveys artists from Colorado and around the country who are using paper to create 3-D compositions. Paper is a familiar art material, but it’s typically used as a…

Over-the-top Tom Wesselmann show is a rare treat at the DAM

Beyond Pop: A Tom Wesselmann Retrospective is the Denver Art Museum’s summer blockbuster. Though Wesselmann was part of the initial group of artists who launched pop art in the ’60s, his accomplishments are not as well remembered as are those of his fellow-traveling contemporaries. Maybe it’s because his chosen topics…

Henry Awards have yet to come up with a winning system

The Colorado Theatre Guild’s Henry Awards, which were presented last night, have been growing in stature, professionalism and efficiency in some ways for quite a while — but this has come at a cost. The awards used to be judged by around a dozen professional theater critics, and because those…

Another 100 Colorado Creatives: Matt Barton

#66: Matt Barton Artist Matt Barton hails from Colorado Springs, where he teaches at the University of Colorado at Colorado Springs and creates fantasy worlds in video and installation, in which animals talk and strange landscapes shimmer and people walk through prismatic lights. In these playgrounds for adults, Barton invites…