DADA Art Bar pours out High Fructose Porn Syrup show tomorrow

DADA Art Bar occupies a prime corner of Denver. This space at 2470 Broadway used to be in the middle of nowhere — dada, indeed! — but these days the Ballpark neighborhood is popping. After months of meticulous planning by Ian Chisholm, who also owns Amerigo right around the corner,…

First Annual March for Absurdity brings weirdness to the streets

Denver’s First Annual March for Absurdity convened at Market street RTD station yesterday afternoon. Whimsical accoutrements abounded at this small but dedicated gathering of weirdos, united in a defiantly pointless exercise for the sake of spectacle. But oh, what a spectacle. While the marcher’s assembled costumes were all decidedly bizarre, the real show was on the baffled faces of passersby as they tried to figure out just what the hell was going on.

Artist-run DATELINE gallery launches tonight in RiNo

When artists Adam Milner and Jeromie Dorrance decided to open an exhibit space in what’s essentially their living room, they did so in a spirit that’s both DIY and not DIY, by putting together a well-crafted show that covers a national gamut of contemporary work by five colleagues in the…

Stanley Film Festival will open with Doc of the Dead

The Stanley Film Festival just announced its opening-night film and other special, scarey events for the four-day fest, which kicks off April 24 at the historic Stanley Hotel. “The Stanley Hotel is consistently voted one of the most haunted hotels in the world, and they give over 75,000 ghost tours…

Monkey Town 4: The future is here, and it’s lovely

One month into its three-month stay in Denver, Monkey Town 4 — the fine-dining experience in a video cube brought here by returning hometown kid Montgomery Knott, who fine-tuned the concept for several years in Brooklyn — is generating a buzz as more and more people suspend reality for two…

Mo’Print presses on with Printmakers 4 at Niza Knoll Gallery

The Month of Printmaking, aka Mo’Print 2014, continues this weekend with a variety of events, including tonight’s opening reception from 5 to 8 p.m. at Niza Knoll Gallery for Printmakers 4. The exhibit features works representing the diversity of printmaking techniques — from woodcut and monoprint to intaglio and even…

Mark Lunning celebrates 25 years of printmaking

For the past several years, a pair of alternating biennials have been presented in the month of March (though the shows and events associated with them often start in February and end in April). In odd-numbered years, there’s the well-established Month of Photography, and in even-numbered years, like 2014, there’s…

Photos: Celebrating 25 Years of Printmaking at Open Press

Michael Paglia visits Open Press in this week’s review, taking in an exhibit made up of 125 pieces by 50 different artists. Much of the focus is on Mark Lunning, printmaster and owner of Open Press, celebrating his work from the last 25 years. Continue reading for photos from the…

Queer undocumented artist Julio Salgado speaks out

Artists often choose to take big risks: In 1971, Chris Burden made art history when he had his assistant shoot him in the arm; just last November, Petr Pavlensky nailed his scrotum to Moscow’s Red Square cobblestones. These artists’ transgressions were aesthetic choices; when Julio Salgado, who migrated to the…

Aether Ceremony opens tomorrow at Black Book Gallery

Work by Max Kauffman, a former Denver resident, will be featured in a new show opening Saturday, March 15, at Black Book Gallery in the Denver’s Art District on Santa Fe. Aether Ceremony “is a look at the interconnectedness of all things, the magic of every day and the sanctuaries…

DIA now has “Dog Diety” — “Blucifer” be damned!

Denver International Airport seems to have a thing for demons and devils. First “Mustang” earned the nickname “Blucifer” after it killed its creator, Luis Jimenez, and now a canine god has shown up in the middle of the Jeppeson Terminal. See also: DIA flying high as Best U.S. Airport for…

Photos: Constructivism takes center stage at William Havu Gallery

Michael Paglia visits William Havu Gallery in this week’s review, taking in two different exhibits. The main show, Emilio Lobato: The Measure of a Man, includes more than sixty works, most of them new,. The smaller show features new work from Emmett Culligan. Continue reading for photos from both exhibits…