5 Can’t-Miss Summer Art Exhibits
There’s no better season for gallery-hopping in Denver. Here, five shows you’ll want to experience this June and July.
There’s no better season for gallery-hopping in Denver. Here, five shows you’ll want to experience this June and July.
Clark Richert in Hyperspace takes a multi-dimensional look at the artist’s mathematical painting career.
The Light Show explores the many ways light is used and understood in art, and features 250 pieces from the DAM’s nine curatorial departments.
The contemporary gallery near the Art District on Santa Fe gathers artists to experiment with wild ideas.
Susan Goldstein’s art is showing in three Denver galleries this month. She gives a behind-the-scenes look at how and why she creates.
For eight nights, select walls in Denver’s River North Arts District will act as large-format art installations.
Month of Photography exhibits run the gamut from portraiture and street photography to abstract work and collage.
The new exhibit, opening at the Denver Art Museum on February 2, celebrates the work of the 29-year-old, Colorado-born painter, whose colorful portraits reimagine the relationship between artist and subject.
Painter Jordan Casteel returns home to the Mile High City for her first major solo art exhibit at the Denver Art Museum.
Terry Gardner, the featured artist at the Coors Western Art Exhibit—part of the National Western Stock Show, beginning January 12—doesn’t want to “glorify” the West. Instead, he produces raw, sometimes melancholic, paintings that highlight the most urgent issues facing rural Colorado.
Dorothy Tanner, the lauded 95-year-old Denver sculptor and recipient of the 2018 Denver Mayor’s Award for Artistic Excellence and Innovation, is now taking students.
Artist Calvin Lee will donate 90 percent of the money he makes during December’s First Friday Art Walk to the Rocky Mountain Immigrant Advocacy Network, which provides free legal services to immigrants in the United States.
After 10 years at the helm of one of Denver’s most creative art institutions, Lerner is ready for something new.
One of the largest-ever selections of Claude Monet paintings is coming to the Denver Art Museum in 2019. Here’s a look at how the museum organized this extraordinary exhibition.
The massive photograph in southwest Denver is part of For Freedoms’ nationwide effort to prompt civic engagement and dialogue through art.
“There’s a visual shift that happens in all of my work that isn’t really apparent in a photograph,” Donovan says.
Rembrandt: Painter as Printmaker is a once-in-a-lifetime collection of 100 pieces by the 17th century Dutch artist, offering unique insight into his skill, artistry, and impact on modern printmaking.
A new exhibition opening Friday explores an epidemic of death by guns in excruciating detail.
Get hands-on instruction in the art of glassblowing at this vibrant Frisco studio, which doubles as a retail space and community center.
Two current Denver Art Museum exhibits, Eyes On: Julie Buffalohead and Eyes On: Shimabuku, explore ideas of identity, tradition, and inherited memory through the depiction of animals.