Book It: The Five Best Literary Events This Week
These readings and nights have all the write stuff in Denver January 15 through January 22, 2018.
These readings and nights have all the write stuff in Denver January 15 through January 22, 2018.
An anonymous “idiot” left his mark on the Ponti building at the Denver Art Museum. Was the graffiti vandalism or legitimate commentary?
In its new Lakewood home, Pirate’s shows have set a very high standard. Two more opened January 5.
When Pope Francis derogatorily took on the culture of modern gender-reassignment technologies and deemed them a part of a “utopia of the neutral” in a 2017 speech, Denver artist and Cabal Gallery member Mar Williams decided to strike back.
Destiny Acuna designed an outfit for the first lady of top Dawg Entertainment, SZA, a five-time Grammy-nominated R&B singer.
It must have been just a handful of hours before the groundbreaking at the Denver Art Museum’s iconic Gio Ponti building on Wednesday morning that some idiot got inside the protective construction fence surrounding the landmark, and vandalized with idiotic graffiti the west side of the building.
Buy a new Late Night ticket for $15, which gets you into The Church after 10 p.m. on February 23 for two more hours of art…and the music will continue until 1:30 a.m.!
Denver native and artist Carlos Frésquez’s people came from the centuries-old Mexican borderland culture of southern Colorado and northern New Mexico, but he experienced his roots from a city boy’s cross-cultural perspective.
The weekend is nearly here, and Denver’s comedy nerds, music appreciators, and animal lovers have given us plenty of reasons to celebrate.
Following several years of preparation and planning, and three months after the world-famous Gio Ponti-designed Denver Art Museum tower was closed, the DAM held a ceremonial ground-breaking on January 10, signaling the start of a three-year rehabilitation project.
Like many a Collet-Serra protagonist, Michael endures much punishment throughout The Commuter — some of it, as with one close-quarters battle involving a guitar, presented in spectacular extended-take fashion
Exhibits opening this week run the gamut in subject matter, from works by tattoo artists to an installation of mind-blowing light sculptures by nonegenarian Dorothy Tanner.
Known for his color-coordinated mosaics of fashion photos taken impromptu on the street, New York Times fashion columnist Bill Cunningham had a blithe eye for style and a knack for being in the right place at the right time.
Poet Catherine O’Neill Thorn has poured her energy and talents into the community through Art From Ashes, the non-profit she founded to empower youth through art and poetry. Now the community is returning the favor with a benefit to help with O’Neill Thorn’s medical bills.
The Insult is a little pushy, sometimes even tough to swallow, but no more than actual geopolitics
In Paddington 2, the emigre bear (again voiced by Ben Whishaw) appears to be the glue holding the Browns’ diverse, colorful neighborhood together
Michael Duran plans to serve some meaty fare at BTD Stage.
The Post tells the story of the late Katherine Graham (Meryl Streep), the longtime publisher of The Washington Post, who took over its operations after her husband committed suicide in the 1970s
Bradlee and Graham learn over the course of The Post to abandon the clubby congeniality that allowed politicians to lie to the press for so long without ever getting called on it
The 21 best events of the week, January 9-15, 2018, as chosen by Westword’s writers and editors.
Michael Warren Contemporary often shows artists associated with Colorado who do not live in Denver, and that’s the case with two solos currently on display in the gallery.
January has the write stuff, with a calendar full of events focusing on everything from the historic to the poetic, from great genre work to the great American novel