In Personal Portrait, Rose McGowan Turns to E! to Recruit Her Army
Citizen Rose is strongest at the start, when it juxtaposes McGowan’s present-day anguish with the media coverage of her as a young starlet in the late 1990s and early 2000s
Citizen Rose is strongest at the start, when it juxtaposes McGowan’s present-day anguish with the media coverage of her as a young starlet in the late 1990s and early 2000s
A musician-turned-designer, and an installation artist to boot, Kenzie Sitterud came on last fall as a member of the most recent class of RedLine residents, a designation the artist is already embracing with a shower of new and ongoing work.
The William Havu Gallery is hosting four solos that add up to one big start for 2018.
You won’t find many offbeat film-going experiences at the multiplex. For those, you have to hit the film festivals, art houses and holes in the wall to see anything truly quirky, experimental or bizarre beyond belief.
First Friday is doing triple duty this month, with new shows popping up across the span of the weekend — all the better to take in more art, at an easier pace. Get with it, and try these eight events on for size.
Laura Merage’s dream of founding an “art incubator” has been realized beyond even her own wildest expectations.
February brings 28 days of mirth and merriment with it. Here are ten shows where you’ll be sure to laugh.
Get up early on January 31 if you want to catch a once-in-a-lifetime-(and-a-half) experience.
There’s time to wonder, as Momoa huffs across the peaks of Newfoundland, what it says about us as a species that so many of us relish the dramatization of acts of terrible cruelty but first demand narrative justification
Black Cube’s 2018 class of fellows signals the institution’s shift from boosting emerging artists toward attempting to establish Denver as an internationally recognized contemporary arts hub.
The 21 best events in Denver for January 30 through February 5, 2018.
Kate Hamill’s Sense and Sensibility, now at the Arvada Center’s Black Box Theatre, isn’t the Jane Austen you’re used to.
Looking for things to do this week? These are our picks.
Something of a prank, a farewell, an art project, a buddy comedy, a vox populi tour of the French countryside, and an inquiry into memory and images and what it means to reveal our eyes to the world, Faces Places is a joyous lulu. It finds the great documentarian and…
At a slim 77 minutes, Porto should seem as fleeting as the memories it’s trying to capture, but it dragged through so many dull scenes that I continually caught myself checking the time
Great News has a screwball charm and a flair for rapid-fire jokes, built on a premise that amusingly literalizes the classic sitcom concept of coworkers as family
Artist, photographer and educator Katie Taft isn’t new to the Denver scene: Back in 2006, she was a member of the second class of Westword MasterMinds, already a creative activist known for her monthly artist-talk series Self Made, which took place in a bar.
Denver is showing that it has the write stuff at numerous events this week.
The Best of Denver 2018 Readers’ Poll is live, and we’re looking for your input on dozens of the categories that will appear in the March 29 issue.
We spotted the model/marketer in Curtis Park, on a visit back from New York, where he studied fashion marketing at Parsons School of Design.
The snow has almost completely melted after last weekend’s snow storm, which means it’s time to get out of the house and into the studio. This weekend offers plenty of opportunities to get onto your mat with free and cheap weekend workouts.
As the final weekend of the month approaches, Denver creatives have packed the upcoming days with a bounty of entertainments at the city’s concert halls, DIY venues, breweries, and even churches.