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.
See Miguel Osorio’s blood paintings at Leon and Rule Gallery’s farewell memorial for the late Joe Clower.
“Loveland is the only show like this I do because the money stays in the community, and they just really love and support artists.”
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.
Set yourself free at Evans School, celebrate co-ops in 40 West, or see the Denver Art Museum’s Biophilia with different eyes.
This expertly designed retro summer-camp experience puts visitors back in 1999 to solve a murder at Camp Z.
Dance to Firefly Music with Lauri Lynnxe Murphy, Daisy Patton is back at K Contemporary, and Pard Morrison and others keep Robischon Gallery filled to the rafters.
See slippery geometrics at Space Gallery, Sasha Novotny’s oil-stick masterworks and São Paulo-bound artist Peter Yumi’s doorbuster at Talk Gallery.
An artsy holiday weekend includes the return of the Cherry Creek Arts Festival, free art-walking in Denver and Colorado Springs and elevated street art at Alto Gallery.
The legendary artist will show his bronze insect sculptures for his final exhibition at the William Havu Gallery.
Yoshitomo Saito is on the fly at Havu Gallery and the Green Box Arts Fest brings James Tapscott’s Arc ZERO: Nimbus to Colorado.
Donald Fodness’s show will be gob-smacking good at the Evans School, while British artist Laura Ellen Bacon goes big at the Denver Art Museum
Learn more about the production from the perspective of Olaf, who is played Jeremy Davis, an actor with strong Denver ties.
Artists wrangle with world violence, high-concentration cannabis and healing art for sexual assault survivors as the summer heat rises in Denver.
Watch improvisers create spontaneous scenes and songs based on audience suggestions in Denver Center’s cabaret space from June 12 to 30.
24 Horror Pin Ups is a new art book that showcases illustrations of the horror-loving model crew.
June’s First Friday sees art shows happening all weekend, with exhibition openings at MCA Denver and the Arvada Center.
The Denver Fringe’s founder discusses the event’s fifth anniversary and recommends must-see events for this year.
“It was a tragedy on so many levels,” says Mister V. “And honestly, a miracle that he didn’t kill anyone else before taking his own life.”
“Being around people who are thoughtful, who read — now more than ever, that’s a sustaining feeling for people.”
“This play speaks directly to men in a way that most productions do not.”
Enjoy works by local artists, fresh floral arrangements, curated Western vintage, flash tattoos, DJ sets and a natural wine bar.