Formal Wares

The five artists featured in the current exhibit at Auraria’s Emmanuel Gallery, Elemental, don’t constitute a school. Neither are they working in the same style or even in the same media. Yet brought together, pieces by Jeff Starr, Dean Habegger, Frank Shaw, Rodger Lang and Scott Chamberlin produce a consistent…

Looking Back

It’s hard to imagine, but at one time regional growth meant something more than the grand opening of another shopping center or the umpteenth big-box hardware store. In the 1970s, new construction also meant a cultural coming of age for metro Denver. The decade began with the completion of the…

Moving Pictures

Because it was made by an artist and is meant to portray America’s recent art history, the film Basquiat, which opened a couple of weeks ago at the Mayan Theater, has sparked a groundswell of interest in the art community. Perhaps only a psychiatrist is truly qualified to interpret painter…

Cool It

Being home on the Front Range in August brings new meaning to the old cowboy song about the skies not being cloudy all day. After all, it’s the too-clear sky that leads to that searing, oppressive heat. But there’s an upside to all that blazing sun: the clear light that…

Reproduction Rites

Colorado’s printmaking tradition is so rich, its influence spreads far beyond state lines. In the first decades of the twentieth century, George Elbert Burr plowed new ground with his color etchings made right here in Denver. In the 1930s Guy McCoy and Paul Gallagher, working in Colorado Springs and Aspen,…

Death of a Salesroom

Watching over the nearly completed destruction of I.M. Pei’s Zeckendorf Plaza is reminiscent of those “thinnest books in the world” sold in novelty shops. You know the kind–Honest Lawyers or Inspired Bureaucrats. Unfortunately, the pageless gag in this case could be titled something like Great Denver Buildings. But that’s not…

Miller Time

Putting together a credible exhibit takes three things: space, money and an organizing concept. But in the art world, it’s often those curators or gallery directors with the least space at their disposal–and even less money–who come through with the biggest ideas and the best shows. The latest case in…

Fully Installed

The distinction between sculpture and installation is a blurry one–and that makes sense, given that the two mediums are both essentially concerned with artfully occupying space. Many local contemporary sculptors and installation artists test the boundary between the two art forms. But no one knows the territory better than well-known…

Summer Vocations

Summer is typically the time for the art world to put up its collective feet and relax. But that hasn’t been the case this year, when June and July have been chock-full of exciting and interesting art events. You’d think it was October already–ordinarily the high-water mark for art exhibitions…

Changing Scenes

The reputations of Pirate and Spark have been rehabilitated in recent years owing to the hard work of their members. Both of these co-op galleries are often the place to find intelligent art shows by accomplished local artists. Surely that’s the case right now with exhibits from versatile painter Stephen…

Through the Years

For the past six months, the Mackey Gallery has presented one large and raucous group show after another–out of character for a place that made its reputation presenting in-depth displays featuring only two or three artists. But it’s apparent that her experience with so many group shows has caused gallery…

Birth of a Notion

When people think today of the Victorian era–if they think of it at all–they imagine a Dickensian world populated with polite yet insufferable prigs and upright if ignorant street urchins. But the latter half of the nineteenth century also marked the emergence of modern and social science–everything from physics to…

Freedom of Expressionism

In its relatively short history, the Center for the Visual Arts, Metropolitan State College’s gallery in LoDo, has celebrated the diversity of the art world. Sally Perisho, the center’s founding director, has paid special attention to art by women, gays and ethnic minorities. And she has mixed things up: One…

Go Figure

In spite of a century of modern art jam-packed with things like abstraction, minimalism and conceptualism, the venerable tradition of depicting the human figure in art has held on admirably. As the modernist twentieth century comes to a close, artists working with the human body as their subject seem to…

Mind Bender

He’s midway through his solo exhibit at the Close Range Gallery of the Denver Art Museum, but Phil Bender still acts embarrassed about all the attention. In fact, Bender’s taken an “Aw, shucks” approach–which works perfectly with his thick Texas drawl–to the accolades heaped on his signature grids of found…

Sweeney…Why We Miss Him

The construction of Denver International Airport has meant many things to many people. For most of us, DIA has meant an extra hour or two of travel just to get to and from the remote facility. To many who were more intimately involved, especially in the airport’s financing and its…

Little Rickeys

It was in mid-March that Paul Hughes, director of the venerable, twenty-something Inkfish Gallery, announced that he would mount an in-depth exhibit of thirty mostly small works by New York-based kinetic sculptor George Rickey. That fine exhibit, George Rickey: Recent Kinetic Sculptures, is now open at Inkfish and runs through…

Heavy Metal

Denver’s really starting to look and act like a big city. The traffic in town is getting worse by the day. There’s no place to park either downtown or in Cherry Creek. And we now have a Mark di Suvero sculpture, “Lao Tzu,” sited on Acoma Plaza at the Civic…

Garden Pests

Unlike in many American cities, just about every tree, shrub, plant and vine in Denver has been planted and cared for by someone. As early as the 1880s, people were bringing blue spruce trees down from the mountains and planting them among the scrub bushes and prairie grasses, which are…

Spaces Loaded

Spring is here, and that can mean only one thing in the art world–you can’t find a parking space on gallery row in LoDo. When the Rockies take over Wazee Street, plenty of fans park at the two-hour meters that line the street. They can count on getting a parking…

Western Expansion

It’s an unexpected stroke of luck to find three of the most important cultural institutions in the mountain West conveniently lined up in a row along Denver’s Civic Center complex. And you could hardly miss the Colorado History Museum, the Denver Public Library and the Denver Art Museum, housed as…

Shooting Star

The comet Hyakutake has just passed close enough–9 million miles or so–to be seen from the earth without the aid of a telescope. Just over a year ago, the comet was completely unknown, even to the amateur astronomer in Japan who ultimately discovered it and for whom it was named;…