George Saunders on Dream Images and Steering Toward the Rapids

George Saunders is one of America’s most celebrated short story writers. Winner of the Folio and Pulitzer prizes and been granted. MacArtuthur fellowship. Since 1996, he’s professor at Syracuse, itself an incubator for the best authors of his generation. Saunders returns to town this week to the Lighthouse Writer’s Workshop, both to participate in a big reading and signing event for fans, and also to conduct a narrower and more focused writers’ studio. However, that group is already full. Westword caught up with Saunders for a phone interview before his trip, to discuss finding out which literature is bullshit, writing stories based on dream images, and how creatively, it’s always best to steer towards the rapids.

Waking Art: James André Paints His Lucid Dreams

You can find art all over town — not just on gallery walls. In this series, we’ll be looking at some of the local artists who serve up their work in coffeehouses and other non-gallery businesses around town. James André says he’s one of the twelve or thirteen people in…

Gallery Sketches: Four Shows to See in Metro Denver September 12-14

This weekend’s gallery openings include works that reimagine inner and outer landscapes, inspire creativity in youngsters or just plain look good on a wall. Highbrow, lowbrow and everywhere in between, there’s something for everyone in Denver this weekend…. See also: Golden Opportunity: Jenny Morgan at Plus Gallery…

The Five Ugliest Sculptures in Denver

I’m a big fan of public art, and Denver has commissioned some standout pieces over the years that really spiff up the city. But sometimes things go awry when politics and civic bureaucracy meet the art world. While some of the people who serve on selection committees may have artistic…

Tim Heidecker on Bedtime Stories and touring with Dr. Steve Brule

Tim Heidecker and Eric Wareheim are enfants terrible whose rhythm, aesthetic and sensibilities have informed everything from cinema to sketch comedy and deodorant advertising in the years since Tom Goes to the Mayor debuted on Adult Swim nearly a decade ago. Gallows humor abounds in their new series Bedtime Stories, a hilariously macabre horror-comedy anthology which makes its Adult Swim debut on September 18. The show is a huge step forward for the duo, who’ve mounted their second national live tour in preparation for the premiere. What sets this tour apart from their last is the inclusion of Dr. Steve Brule on the lineup. Played by character actor John C. Reilly, who relishes each awkward syllable in the role of a profoundly unsettling physician with dubious advice, Brule first appeared in interstitial segments on Awesome Show and then spun off into his own series, Check it out with Dr. Steve Brule. Westword caught up with Heidecker before his Paramount theater show for a brief phone interview.

Neo-Modernists Go for That Waxy Buildup in Works on View at Space

Michael Burnett, director of Space Gallery, has a taste for neo-modernism — that post-postmodern style that’s been coming on strong for the last decade. You can see it in his neo-modernist building, which opened this past summer (and which, by the way, has become the place to have your cannabis-friendly…

Hari and Deepti’s Light-Box Stories at Black Book Tomorrow

When you walk into the Black Book Gallery for the opening of Oh, The Places You Will Go! on Friday night, the lights will be turned off and the only thing you will see are the fantastical light-boxes of husband-wife duo Hari and Deepti. See also: Filmmaker Guy Maddin on…

Review: Conceptual Takes on Nature Fill the Robischon Gallery

The exhibit Testing Grounds, which runs through this weekend only at Robischon Gallery, brings together artists who look to nature, especially the Western landscape, as sources for their disparate approaches. As usual at Robischon, there’s enough room to allow the artists to essentially be given solos, so that the work…

Harmony Hammond and Tirza True Latimer on Queer Feminist Abstraction

Art naturally evolved from representation (pictures of things) toward abstraction, argued modernist art critic Clement Greenberg and his fellow formalists. Portraiture and landscape painting be damned: In pure art, paintings do nothing but express their essence as painting. But in the 1960s, painting about painting fell out of style and…

Night Job is the Synthesis of Day-To-Day Grind and Dealing With the Man

Night Job is a collective show featuring artists who represent a young, working-class, art class perspective united by a sensibility that combines urban grit, an ineffable dream-like quality and an almost haunted yearning for connection with the essence of life. The work also embodies a blend of seeming thematic opposites…