Review: Rhythm & Roots Dances Into the Denver Art Museum

Over the summer, the Denver Art Museum has presented shows and events about dance — not something ordinarily associated with fine art, since dance’s defining characteristic is movement, and few fine-art forms move. The programming has all been inspired by Rhythm & Roots: Dance in American Art; mounted on level…

Galleries: Art Gym, Counterpath and a Traveling Feast in Boulder

Along the Front Range this weekend, you can travel to alternative places and spaces to participate in art that asks questions while leaving the answers up to you. Begin your journey at these three spots. bell & banowetzArt Gym Denver Through September 10 Terri Bell and Nicole Banowetz might seem…

Review: Michael Brohman and Walter Barton at Pirate

Denver artist Michael Brohman is juggling dualities in his solo at Pirate, In a World of Circles and Squares, which closes this Sunday. Not only does each piece express some kind of double meaning, but the show itself comprises two distinct bodies of work. It’s almost as though Brohman is…

Review: Matthew Harris Goes for Baroque at Leon

Last call for a smart-looking solo, Baroque Selfies: Matthew Harris, at Leon Gallery. Harris is a Denver sculptor who earned an MFA at the University of Colorado Boulder in 2011, and is now head of 3D Fine Arts at the Rocky Mountain College of Art + Design. His work combines…

The Mayday Experiment: A Big Step!

I’ve never made more mistakes on a single project than I have on these stairs. From re-cutting wood to watching things warp to learning exactly how unsquare the framed interior hub is, this has been the most challenging part of building the tiny house, the part we started back in…

MCA Denver Closed This Weekend — Drying Out After Flood

It’s a beautiful day to get out and see some art in Denver — but you can skip the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver.  After pipes burst in the building yesterday, the MCA had to close for the weekend. Here’s the message from the museum: MCA Members, Friends & Visitors,…

Galleries: Matt Sesow, RedHanded 8, Kim Shively and Alicia Ordal

Third Friday brings a hero of the disabled artist community and a quickie show dedicated to the color red to the Art District on Santa Fe, while Kim Shively’s video about pumas slinks into Forest Room 5 on Saturday. Here’s where to go this weekend to enjoy some artist appreciation…

Review: Between Stations, Rule Gallery’s Last Show in RiNo

Among the unpleasant upheavals predicated by Denver’s current boom are the twin problems of soaring rents and the demolition of existing buildings to make room for new ones. Together they’re forcing artists out of their studios and galleries out of their homes. That’s the case with Hinterland, whose location in…

Joellyn Duesberry, Renowned Landscape Painter, Passes Away

Landscape painter Joellyn Duesberry quickly became a fixture of the Colorado art scene after she first came west from New York in 1986. Now the artist, who lived in Greenwood Village, has died after a long struggle with cancer. Born in 1944 in Richmond, Virginia, Duesberry became interested in art…

Artist Andrew Hockenberry Restores Abstract Mural on Potager

Art has been given new life on the wall of Potager, a garden spot of a restaurant in Capitol Hill. After eight years, abstract artist Andrew Hockenberry returned to Denver from New York City to restore his mural on the north-facing wall of the beloved eatery that Teri Rippeto opened in 1997. Hockenberry,…

Review: Jason Middlebrook’s Drawing Time Dazzles at David B. Smith

Mid-career artist Jason Middlebrook, who lives and works in Hudson, New York, is the subject of an elegant single-artist show titled Drawing Time at David B. Smith Gallery. This is Middlebrook’s first solo at the gallery, but his work has been exhibited nationally for over twenty years and acquired for important…

Review: Performance on Paper Dances Into the Denver Art Museum

This summer, the Denver Art Museum is presenting several exhibits devoted to dance; DAM curators are mounting shows within their specialties that somehow touch on that topic. Though it might seem like a stretch for Darrin Alfred, the curator of architecture, design and graphics, to come up with something relevant…