Dikeou Collection Going Dark for a Year, but Pop-Up Will Keep Hopping
The space will reopen in February 2020 with a one-woman show by Devon Dikeou.
The space will reopen in February 2020 with a one-woman show by Devon Dikeou.
Save your rent money and still have some fun!
With his show at David B. Smith, he takes a swing at Jose Maria Velasco’s work.
Colorado is getting creative with openings, closings, brunches and arty bashes.
With the biennial Month of Photography well under way, it may seem like photo-based displays have taken over most of the city’s exhibition venues, including the intimate Sandra Phillips Gallery, which has a small group show, and the cozy Leon, which offers an engaging solo. Both are anchored by photos of…
A decade of drag deserves a big celebration.
What’s the story behind the Office of Storytelling?
Just because the weekend is over doesn’t mean the good times have to end. Denver’s cultural offerings proliferate throughout the work week, and if you fancy queer-friendly punk dance parties, comedy shows and art museums, you’re in for several treats. Over the next several days you can fill your spare…
When Esteban Peralta decided he wanted to open up Peralta Projects, a DIY garage gallery in his La Alma/Lincoln Park home, he surveyed his neighbors. They responded with enthusiasm, and Peralta Projects was born. Now, the project’s leaving.
The city has put out a call for qualifications for three new Denver Public Art commissions.
Norman Rockwell: Imagining Freedom will be at the DAM from this May to August 2020.
Jake Siebenlist, the eighteen-year-old from Monument who destroyed $96,900 worth of art at Denver Art Museum’s Stampede exhibit, pleaded guilty Thursday morning to criminal mischief, a class four felony that could have led to up to six years in prison and a $500,000 fine.
Spring has finally arrived in Denver, and the city is blooming with activities, from music to film screenings and cultural festivities, all sure to delight.
These finalists for the 2019 Colorado Book Awards make a pretty nifty literary to-do list.
Landmark assures us that not all hope is lost.
When Phoenix-based art critic and Heard Museum curator Erin Joyce slammed Meow Wolf in the online culture journal Hyperallergic, the Santa Fe experiential arts company bit back.
Comic-book artist Yves Navant wrote 13: The Astonishing Lives of the Neuromantics like it was his suicide note.
It’s a fundraiser for the first Colorado Festival of Horror.
He may be one of the world’s highest-grossing comedians, but chances are that only loyal fans and regular Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee viewers are aware of Sebastian Maniscalco.
Photographer George Lange, known for his celebrity portraits, has been shooting photos since he was a seven-year-old kid growing up in the Squirrel Hill neighborhood of Pittsburgh.
From signing trees to street photos to restroom art, Denver’s art scene has plenty to offer this week.
A Boulder-based collage artist is asking Democrats to dump the donkey and replace it with his Flag Horse.