The Best Art Shows to Catch on First Friday
Find gifts for the creatives in your life, take in year-end shows and soak up the final First Friday of 2024.
Find gifts for the creatives in your life, take in year-end shows and soak up the final First Friday of 2024.
Meow Wolf Denver has introduced a new app, Psychic Sensor.
“To me, there’s not a fine or hard line drawn between the two,” says the artist.
Look for the perfect present, or just look at new work.
This could be the last time all the original illustrations for Maurice Sendak’s classic Where the Wild Things Are will be displayed together.
Warm a cold day with some visual heat.
A trifecta of superstar artists opens at Robischon Gallery, while the Denver Art Museum welcomes Slam Nuba and the legacy of Maurice Sendak.
The DCPA’s Off-Center, in collaboration with the original London production team, has put an immersive spin on the popular Hasbro board game.
Find your roots in cultural festivities in Westwood and Breckenridge or commune with nature at Bell Projects and Understudy.
Migrant art, Western art and DÃa de los Muertos celebrations take over the town, while a Maurice Sendak retrospective comes to the DAM.
“I wanted to do something that would reintroduce the neighborhood to this tradition,” says Denver artist Arlette Lucero.
The Cherry Creek Arts Festival has been honored with the title six times.
Watch art in the making at Denver Walls, celebrate the region’s Chicano-art heritage and get spooky with Terry Campbell.
Denver artist Joe Rollman will be displaying his wide and varied pop-culture portraiture at Ink Comic Art Gallery throughout October.
See Sam Grabowska explore haptics at Leon Gallery, say “so long” to the Evans School studio artists or make a deal with Michael Dowling.
Developer Carla Ferreira has filled Hogan Park with incredible sculptures, including work from the Burning Man Festival and beyond.
Catch the color fields of Alma Thomas, moving pictures at the Digerati Experimental Media Festival, outdoor painting at Street Wise’s Mural Fest and more.
“Our strategy and model going forward is to produce our own work every other year and, in between, to bring in the coolest stuff we can find from around the world.”
Muralists take over Alto, a photographer channels H.P. Lovecraft, and CHAC artists examine what it means to be Chicano.
Now in its fifth year, the festival hosts over a dozen local muralists painting in the Aurora Cultural Arts District and then celebrates with a block party.
Emmanuel Gallery’s new exhibit uses a world-class group of artists to ask: “How do we set limits to limits?”
Get in line for the Art Students League of Denver’s Summer Art Market, or mentally tongue-tied with word-gamer Joel Swanson.