Down and Out in Downtown Denver

The free-for-all campaign to erase the recent history of Denver’s architecture, endorsed and enabled by Mayor Wellington Webb’s administration, continues unabated. And it’s amazing how many of the losses are associated with the Colorado Convention Center. The latest heartbreaking chapter came one step closer to ending a couple of weeks…

Art Beat

Ron Judish Fine Arts (1617 Wazee Street, 303-571-5556) is currently presenting a trio of superb solo shows. In the grand front room is Keith Milow: drawings, which features recent works by the world-famous Anglo-American artist. Milow uses steel and copper that have been chemically oxidized so that the steel is…

3-D Glances

World-famous modern and contemporary artists are part of the stock and trade of the Robischon Gallery, which makes the point with Judy Pfaff: An Installation of Drawings. The fairly large show highlights some of the New York legend’s latest creations. It runs until the end of the year. Pfaff first…

Art Beat

Gallery Sink, owned and operated by Mark Sink, is currently hosting a retrospective entitled Ann White: 1950-2000. Sink has a special interest in White, with whom he has had a lifelong relationship: White is Sink’s mother. White has long been associated with “The Nine,” a Denver artist group that’s still…

Pilgrims’ Progress

It’s a shame, but it’s true: Only a fraction of the crowds that came out for the Denver Art Museum shows featuring Toulouse-Lautrec, Impressionism and Matisse will bother to see Painters and the American West. And that’s too bad, because the exhibit holds its own in comparison with those popular…

Art Beat

In the main gallery at Pirate right now, Linde Schlumbohm has invited a trio of locally prominent installation artists for 3 Fold, on display through Sunday. Each artist — Gail Wagner, Virginia Folkestad and Susan Meyer Fenton — has been given her own section of the room. Characteristic painted fiber…

Outside In

Landscapes have been a popular subject in the fine arts for thousands of years, but in just the last century, they have become even more appealing to Colorado artists because our local scenery is so visually emphatic. Between the mountains and the plains, the West has practically cornered the market…

Art Beat

The works of two installation artists are displayed together in the unusual Fabrication and Fiction, running through November 29 at the Colorado Gallery of the Arts at Arapahoe Community College in Littleton. In half of the gallery, ACC faculty member Mari Blacker has created various vignettes contrasting materials such as…

Slap Shots

In the capacious lower-level galleries at the Arvada Center, curator and exhibition director Kathy Andrews has installed a pair of large photo displays: Fresh Eyes: Colorado Photographers¹ Views, which looks at recent experimental photography by some of the state’s most interesting artists, and Signs and Relics, a solo show that’s…

Fast and Loose

Mark Masuoka took over as director at the Museum of Contemporary Art/Denver on January 1, 2000, and he quickly transformed the place from what had looked like the city’s largest co-op into something that could pass, on a good day, for a bona fide museum. But less than ten months…

Art Beat

Interpretive Visions, at the Camera Obscura Gallery, is a solo exhibit featuring black-and-white photos by Loretta Young-Gautier. The show includes older photos dating back to the 1980s, as well as a batch of new ones. Young-Gautier studied with local black-and-white masters Ron Wohlauer and Ray Whiting. Like them, she has…

Trouble in Purgatory

Less than a year ago, when I learned that Mark Masuoka was set to take on the director’s job at the Museum of Contemporary Art Denver on January 1, 2000, I told him, “May God save your immortal soul.” Masuoka gave out a ready guffaw, but I wasn’t even half-kidding…

Artbeat

Open Press, the fine print-making shop, is currently featuring a handsome group show in its gallery. Relief Prints refers to a process of making prints with blocks, either wood or wood-faced linoleum, that have been carved with patterns in relief. The blocks are then inked and finally pressed onto paper…

More About Less

Over the last few years, Rule Modern and Contemporary Gallery has increasingly specialized in abstract painting, with contemporary takes on minimalism often given center stage. “I’ve come to it by living in this environment,” says director Robin Rule, referring both to the austerity of much of the Western landscape and…

Artbeat

Lisbeth Neergaard Kohloff, exhibition director of the Colorado Photographic Arts Center, says she selected the three photographers in the group show Retro Truth because all are working with memories, with the past. The title says it all retro. The first featured photographer is New Yorker Carol Golemboski. In toned gelatin…

Real to Real

Over the last century, hundreds of dedicated, masterful artists have worked in Colorado. But while a score of them have achieved genuine international recognition — on the level of Vance Kirkland, for example — only a handful made art history. There’s Boardman Robinson, the social realist painter who worked in…

Art Beat

Is That Jazz? is a real oddball of a show, a collection of bizarre, yet somehow quaint, paintings, watercolors and a construction by Dallas artist David McCullough. The pieces are dense, opaque and thick — words that also describe the tangle of theoretical concepts that underlie his work. Like Jung,…

Holy Daze

Located within the Jewish Community Center, the Singer Gallery’s association with the Jewish community might create the assumption that it explores only Jewish themes in art. But for a long time, Singer has presented shows that, while typically of interest to the Jewish community, have not, strictly speaking, been Jewish…

Art Beat

The Rocky Mountain Womens Institute has gone down a rocky road in recent months, and its this years pair of RMWI Fine Art Associates, Lauri Lynnxe Murphy and Dania Pettus, whove blazed the trail. It began when the two artists notified the RMWI that the pieces they planned to create…

Short Stories

Jerry Kunkel’s name is well known in these parts: He’s been on the art faculty at the University of Colorado at Boulder for more than thirty years, and for a while in the 1970s, he fronted the punk band Joey Vane and the Scissors. But though many people have heard…

Art Beat

Emerging artist Colin Livingston has put together a moving show made up of paintings and mixed-media pieces that depict his mother. Mom, currently at the Apart Modern Gallery, takes up a difficult topic, however: Livingston’s mother committed suicide when he was in the fifth grade. The artist addresses this deeply…

Hot off the Presses

Master printer Bud Shark has been making prints in and around Boulder for a long time since he first established his fine-art press, Shark’s Inc., in the 1970s. Bill Havu, director of his namesake William Havu Gallery, has been around for a long time as well, selling fine prints in…