All the Best Art Shows and Events This Weekend in Denver
It’s your last chance to see art in a taxidermy shop in 2024, but you can also paint on your glam-metal face for the BRDG Project’s Big Hair ’80s Dance Party.
It’s your last chance to see art in a taxidermy shop in 2024, but you can also paint on your glam-metal face for the BRDG Project’s Big Hair ’80s Dance Party.
Freak Train is Denver’s iconic open-mic/variety show at the Bug Theatre, where guests are met with free beer and endless surprises.
“Having a regular drag show here is a way for the LGBTQ community and culture to be ingrained. It’s a pure expression of our culture. It’s not watered-down.”
Drew Petersen’s near-death ski accident in 2017 caused depressive and manic episodes. In a new film, he tells how running helped make “life full” again.
The artist-focused film festival celebrates its fifth year with screenings and installations “showcasing the infinite potential of documentary media.”
Weeks after he sharted on her lawn, he sent a photo of himself standing atop a mountain with a note: “This could be you and me but we’re both playing different games.”
Denver’s disability-affirming theater company will perform one of the most famous and challenging musicals at the DCPA.
Aurora, Colorado Springs and Denver have “disproportionately impacted communities” when it comes to outdoor-recreation access.
See Miguel Osorio’s blood paintings at Leon and Rule Gallery’s farewell memorial for the late Joe Clower.
The new location in Englewood will include a basement space for concerts, co-owner Jim Norris says.
“Loveland is the only show like this I do because the money stays in the community, and they just really love and support artists.”
“When you do comedy in your own language, we’re all in on the joke together. It kind of feels like we’re laughing together and serving as a mirror for the immigrant experience in the United States.”
Piper was incarcerated for twelve years, and the whole time, he tattooed. He reflects on it in his new book, American InkSlinger.
Denver Film has been working overtime to make summer one of the absolute best times of the year for cinema.
No one knows what happened to Julia de Burgos, the Puerto Rican poet, in the last nine days of her life. The Flamboyán Theatre is examining her life in its debut play.
More than 10,000 Japanese Americans were incarcerated at Camp Amache in southeastern Colorado.
Denver author Sue Seserman “transforms disabilities into superabilities.”
Washington Park is celebrating its 125th birthday today with plenty of fun and games.
Check out a new $7.8 million interactive exhibit where you can cross paths with kangaroos.
Filled with big prizes and “twists,” Colorado’s Next Drag Superstar competition will see drag artists performing at X Bar each Sunday until September 29.
See D’art Gallery’s fully expanded space, observe work from an artist who stayed at the Amache internment camp and get down with a hip-hop art show and concert.
There will be a fundraising concert to support the Aztlan on Saturday, August 3.