All in Review

Plane of Action / Just As I Am / A Home In Between

The Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art (BMoCA) has kicked off their fall season with three exciting new exhibitions: Kevin Hoth and George Perez: Plane of Action, Kristopher Wright: Just As I Am, and Erin Hyunhee Kang: A Home In Between. These shows are all connected by the artists’ impulse to push the potential of photography as form and medium through distinctive methods and processes. The result is a wonderfully multifaceted program in which the simultaneous harmony and particularities within the three exhibitions expand photography practices and create a cathartic interplay between themes of transforming the mundane, destruction, (re)construction, memory, healing, and hope.

Sweaty Wedding

Everyone is invited to Juntae TeeJay Hwang’s Sweaty Wedding at Union Hall. Lined up against the walls, sweating under hot spotlights, confidently crafted ceramic forms emit the austerity and discomfort of ancient vessels in contemporary drag. Their probing gazes remind us that we are as much a part of the exhibit as the artwork.

Vessel

“Vessel” at the Dairy Arts Center in Boulder is a substantial show encompassing the work of 19 contemporary artists. It allows the works themselves to assert the meaning of the show’s namesake, without the need for hefty historical analysis. The focus lies on what each artist offers up with “vessels” featuring their own distinctive layers of contextuality, referentiality, and significance.

Like Like

The Like Like exhibition is on display until February 3 at the Rocky Mountain College of Art and Design’s Rotunda Gallery. Curators Gretchen Marie Schaefer and Louise Martorano have brought together the works of 19 artists who’ve occupied TANK Studios spaces in Denver over the past few years. Rather than shared themes, Schaefer and Martorano have curated people (i.e. souls) instead of the objects they’ve created. 

Action/Abstraction Redefined

Action/Abstraction Redefined, on view at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center, offers a visual lesson in art history. It is part of the ongoing reexamination of the stories we tell ourselves about our collective past. The show’s title asks us to reconsider how art historical terms, such as “Action Painting” and “Abstract Art” achieve traction and how institutions, including museums and galleries, help establish and distribute definitions. This exhibit features over 50 pieces, mostly paintings, by Native American modernist artists working from the 1940s through the 1970s. Many of the artists were associated with the Institute of American Indian Arts (IAIA) in Santa Fe.

Off the Shelf

Books have a dynamism as cultural creations that defy space and time. With this in mind, curators Anna Bernhard and Johnny Plastini have organized an exhibition of artists that challenge our conceptual framework of the book and its contents. Off the Shelf: Contemporary Book Arts in Colorado, presented at Colorado State University’s Gregory Allicar Museum of Art in Fort Collins, celebrates artists’ fascination with books as art objects and in particular their conception of artist books. Artist books emerge when the mediums of binding, illustrating, painting, papermaking, printing, painting, sculpting, and writing are combined and made multiple.

Recurring Dreams

In Recurring Dreams at Rule Gallery in Denver, Nathan Abels applies his cosmic curiosity towards the exploration of environmental narratives that stretch within and beyond human time. From the microscopic detail of a bone’s porous surface to the enormity of a melting ice cap, Abels offers an illuminating new perspective on the climate crisis.

A Wink is Just a Wink

In Amber Cobb’s new paintings and sculptures on display in the exhibition “A Wink is Just a Wink” at Meow Wolf Denver’s Galleri Gallery, the artist uses the grid as a tool of order and chaos, a seemingly conflicted notion that introduces in systems like linguistics and spatial dynamics and encourages viewers to explore spaces beyond boundaries.

The Everyday and Everyday Objects Recontextualized

The Everyday and Everyday Objects Recontextualized at fooLPRoof Contemporary Art Gallery is a soft offering that will cushion the discordant shift from summer into fall. Led by gallery owner and artist Laura Phelps Rogers and true to its title, the large group exhibition edifies the commonplace through a medley of color, contour, and craft. Grounded in a loose thematic interpretation of “the everyday” over any single aesthetic, the fooLPRoof show leaves the “recontextualizing” to the viewer and rewards those who stop in to look.

La inclusión de mi raza (The inclusion of my race)

Mexican artist Gabriel Rico is well known for his found-object-based sculptures, but this exhibit represents new aspects of his work with the use of AR and the large scale of the totems. Created from materials donated by Denver-based organizations, the totems tell the story of Denver’s complex culture through everyday and novel objects. The AR introduces a digital layer and strengthens the theme of inclusion.

Transformative Power: Indigenous Feminisms

On September 15, 2022, the Vicki Myhren Gallery at the University of Denver (DU) opened its very first exhibition focused on notions of gender and structures of power from a distinctly Indigenous perspective. Guest curated by Daina Warren, who is a member of the Akamihk Montana First Nation in Maskwacis, Alberta, Transformative Power: Indigenous Feminisms features Indigenous, female, and Queer-identifying artists who “explore and critique a variety of themes, including Native politics, economics, land-based values, language loss, the body and sexuality, historical narratives and popular culture, as well as the cosmological and relational belief systems of First Peoples, among others.” The artists’ integration of intersectional identities—Indigenous, female, and/or Queer—with embodied cultural and historical traumas in performance works, photography, and videos makes visible these hidden identities and traumas while demanding that viewers pay attention to the political issues that render them invisible.

Tree – Saw - Paint / Reimagined / the texture of life and the beauty of the world / Nightfall, Fallen

At Kreuser Gallery in Colorado Springs, 17-year-old Tanner Valant is showing several hyper-realistic drawings in colored pencil he learned how to make during the pandemic. And Sean O’Meallie’s show Tree - Saw - Paint feels like juicy and nutritious fun. Artist Karen Khoury uses texture to explore the struggles and challenges of life and community in her show the texture of life and beauty of the world at G44 Gallery. And in an exhibition titled Nightfall, Fallen, Meghan Wilbur displays a collection of landscape paintings with vibrant hues and breathtaking deep blues.

Temporary Concrete Lost to Time

Burns Park is a public sculpture park trapped between Colorado Avenue, Leetsdale Drive, and East Alameda Avenue in Denver. These days, it’s really nothing to look at. However, the site has an interesting history tied to Denver’s contemporary public art scene. In 1968, ten artists joined forces to hold the first ever Denver Sculpture Symposium at Burns Park to activate the park and invite community members to be part of the collective construction of large-scale artworks.

Adimensionalities

During his architectural master’s program at Gdańsk University of Technology, Polish artist Krzysztof Syruć learned that most artists create “the same painting” over and over again. Vexed by this notion, Syruć—who also goes by the graffiti name PROEMBRION, and who had already developed a compelling visual language in that medium—determined to uncover and construct new, anomalous forms. His pursuit of generative abstraction is now assembled in a stunning solo exhibition at Ryan Joseph Gallery titled Adimensionalities, on view through October 12.

Recombobulation

A found object artwork is a portal—to an illuminated past, an invented future, and a more lucid present. Recombobulation at the Curtis Center for the Arts brings together eight artists—Sue Blosten, Leigh Cabell, Jimmy Descant, Mark Friday, Deborah Jang, Michelle Lamb, Kelton Osborn, and Floyd Tunson—who expertly transform the things of days gone by into open-ended material narratives.

Dark Archive

In elin o’Hara slavick’s solo exhibition Dark Archive at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs (UCCS) Galleries of Contemporary Art (GOCA) Downtown, each colorful drawing corresponds to a site bombed by the U.S. The cyanotypes are made by the shadows of radiated objects that were hit by the atomic blast in Hiroshima—objects now preserved in the Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum. slavick’s strategy is to create visually arresting work that draws us in while simultaneously pointing to something outside itself.

A Culture Preserved (in the Black Experience)

The exhibition A Culture Preserved (in the Black Experience) at the Museum of Art Fort Collins features ten artists, four of whom are Colorado-based: Efilaf Art, Louise Cutler, Thomas Lockhart, and Jim Wider. With nationally-known artists Karen Drewry, Gerald Griffin, Deborah Shedrick, Joyce Owens, Charly Palmer, and Kevin Wak Williams as well, this exhibition displays the nuance and minutiae of the Black American experience through drawing, painting, and sculpture, and a number of perspectives.

geometric frustrations / Volumes

The relationship between presence and trace dominates in two exhibitions by Boulder- and Limassol, Cyprus-based artist Marina Kassianidou. Trained in art and computer science, Kassianidou focuses on mark-making and surface and the ways in which drawing is a responsive combination of both. She also emphasizes the role of multistep, transformational processes by displaying each step of creation as artworks in their own right. In geometric frustrations at east window SOUTH in Boulder, Kassianidou illustrates the process of evolving trash into glorified art objects. The artist’s love of mark-making is apparent in her two-person exhibition Volumes at Lane Meyer Projects in Denver with Maia Ruth Lee.

PROCESS: Making Things on the Way to Making Other Things

With Process: Making Things on the Way to Other Things, curator Rick Griffith offers the viewer a glimpse into the mind of the artist. The 17 works presented at the Art Students League of Denver, ranging from paintings to video to sculpture, reveal mistakes, leftovers, and happy accidents. They re-contextualize works meant for other purposes or address directly the mind behind the object. By showing us their “rubbish, or trash,” or works that aren’t “good enough to show others,” as Griffith says in his curator’s statement, the artists reveal their vulnerability and present us with works that are more relatable, and more human, than what many of us are accustomed to viewing.

The Contour of Feeling

Monstrous cedar sculptures as large as small trees characterize Ursula von Rydingsvard’s exhibition The Contour of Feeling at the Denver Botanic Gardens. The title reflects both the poetics of the sculptures and the tragic, triumphant poetry that could be made about the artist’s childhood. Along with her family, German-born Ukrainian and Polish artist Ursula von Rydingsvard spent her early years as a forced laborer under the Nazis. After World War II, the family traveled among displacement camps. These are experiences she sometimes references in her work, though minimally.