All in Review

High Strangeness

On view through July 2 at Lane Meyer Projects in Denver, High Strangeness features eight paintings by Littleton, Colorado-born and -based artist Mark Farrell that are gleefully sinister and ominously playful. Farrell’s works are ideal for the room in which they are featured. The exhibition evokes a corresponding impishness to RiNo’s PoN pOn art bar—through which visitors must walk to reach the project space—while indulging in macabre spectacles that parody cultural façades. But Farrell does more than blur the line between “classic horror and the suburban mundane,” producing multi-layered scenes that delight in the true comedic horror of living in the twenty-first century: life itself.

Sanctuary

Todd Herman’s exhibition Sanctuary at Mercury Framing in Boulder invites associations. He displays his photographs serially and they read like a film strip. Taking in the exhibit, your choice becomes one of narration—of how you will view these images as a story and decide what they mean. Ultimately, the meaning is continually shifting.

Clerestory

Ethan’s Jackson’s clerestory takes the camera obscura and, using mirrors and sunlight, evolves it into an immersive art experience where the outside is projected inside. The inside in this case is a wing of the Rodolfo “Corky” Gonzales Library Branch on the first floor, in the Story Time Tower which is located behind the children’s section. Created as part of the City of Denver’s Public Art Program in 2016, clerestory integrates architecture and optical artwork to create a scene of nature on the vaulted ceiling of the tower.

Lasting Impressions / Onward and Upward

Lasting Impressions and Onward and Upward: Shark’s Ink at the University of Colorado Art Museum in Boulder present prints from an array of artistic movements to tell the idiosyncratic story of the United States. The works on view collectively assert that printmaking, long used as an accessible means for a wider audience to view an artwork or a message, pulses with an inherent urgency rooted in the desire for communication.

Art in Black and White

At 3 Square Art (3SA) Gallery’s 4th annual juried Art in Black and White exhibition in Fort Collins, curator and gallery owner Kumiko S. McKee leans into this novelty, assembling 51 works by 29 Colorado artists and one Chinese artist. Working in vastly different media, these artists are a dynamic example of not only regional and international talent, but the boundlessness of a classic style.

Duality

Duality: Contemporary Works by Indigenous Artists at the Longmont Museum gathers together artists who navigate the societal and material complexities of existing in the United States as members of a group whose stories have largely been told through a colonial lens. In a protest against homogeneous, mainstream descriptions of Indigenous people, Gregg Deal, the curator and a participating artist, orchestrates an emotionally tangible exhibition featuring the works of JayCee Beyale, Julie Buffalohead, Gregg Deal, Nicholas Galanin, Jeffrey Gibson, April Holder, Chelsea Kaiah, Cannupa Hanska Luger, Natani Notah, Jamie Okuma, Virgil Ortiz, Danielle SeeWalker, and Steven Yazzie. 

Pioneer Printmaker

Over the course of many years, the Sangre de Cristo Arts & Conference Center in Pueblo has amassed hundreds of drawings, paintings, and prints by the American artist Gene Kloss. A selection of these works from the artist’s nearly 70-year artistic career are now on view in the Arts Center through May 23. While Kloss is mostly known for her depictions of New Mexican landscapes and Native peoples and culture, the exhibition contends that what is most remarkable about her work is her skill and innovation as a printmaker, no matter the subject. Yet the relationship between artist and subject always matter, and the questions that Kloss’s themes raise about representation may be the most intriguing aspect of the show.

Defining Our Voices

Defining Our Voices: Evolving into the Artists We Want to Be at the new Davis Gallery on the University of Denver campus recognizes and celebrates the liminal space between the milestones we use to gauge success in the art world. Featuring eight University of Denver alumni who graduated in the last five years, the exhibition provides space for emerging artists to explore how their relationship to art has changed over time. 

Young, Gifted and Black

The traveling exhibition currently on view at the University of Denver’s Vicki Myhren Gallery is titled Young, Gifted and Black: The Lumpkin-Boccuzzi Family Collection of Contemporary Art. The exhibition presents forty artworks made over the last 35 years by an impressive bevy of artists, all of whom could be accurately described as young, gifted, and Black. Curated by Antwaun Sargent and Matt Wycoff, the “lovely precious dream” of this exhibit is to reflect and celebrate the diverse range of experiences within the Black cultural milieu while situating the collection as part of a larger, ongoing dialogue happening in the art world about power, representation, identity, and access.

Art Student and Alumni Invitational

Artmaking is the pursuit of expressing our inner life through metaphorical and material means. At the Arapahoe Community College Art Student and Alumni Invitational, on view now at the Colorado Gallery of the Arts on the Littleton campus, ten artists bring their ideas into being through drawing and painting, installation, metalwork, photography, sculpture, and textiles. The premise that materiality holds meaning is what connects them.

Nature, Flora, Fauna, Earth

The exhibition celebrates the upcoming onset of spring by featuring works that visually depict nature—such as flowers, animals, water, and fire—from Rocky Mountain Quilt Museum’s permanent collection. Shown together are antique quilts from the Sharee and Murray Newman collection as well as art quilts from the Rooted in Tradition collection. [2] While Nature, Flora, Fauna, Earth speaks to enthusiasts of the textile-based art form, it raises questions about the relationship between traditional and art quilting: What do antique and modern quilts have in common?

Rice & Resilience

While many wax nostalgic about their favorite childhood foods or those specific to their culture, food plays a deeper, sometimes mystical role in Colorado artists’ work at History Colorado Center’s new exhibition Colorado’s Asian Food Culture: Rice & Resilience. The Japanese Arts Network and Asian Pacific Islander (API) community partnered with the museum for this exhibition, pairing Asian artists’ voices with testimonies from restaurateurs and other community members to highlight the wealth of Asian cuisine in the state and food’s ability to transmit generational knowledge.

Immortalized: Lens and Light

Immortalized: Lens and Light at the Center for the Arts Evergreen celebrates glass and light as mediums for self-expression. Curator Sara Miller first approached the theme literally, selecting stained glass and mosaic pieces by Evergreen artists Trudy Chiddix, Maria Sheets, and Susan Wechsler. Expanding on the idea of glass by looking at the form of a lens, Miller added photographic works by Thomas Carr, Ron Johnson, Raj Manickam, Stephen Podrasky, Ward Russell, John Shelton, and Michael Trupiano—all members of the Colorado-based collective Photo Pensato

Entanglements

Art has an entangled relationship with nature. As the philosopher Aristotle famously said, “Art not only imitates nature, but also completes its deficiencies.” This ancient ideal is critiqued and expounded upon in Entanglements, a new exhibition at Metropolitan State University’s Center for Visual Art in Denver. As a lens-based exhibition featuring eleven artists, the show explores our connections to the natural world by illustrating the complex relationships humans have with nature and its resources. These works question humanity’s role in the natural world as caretakers, observers, and even destroyers.

Dancing in the Diaspora

For a few weeks in February, Understudy invites visitors to experience Dancing in the Diaspora, a solo exhibition of new works by Denver-based artist Autumn T. Thomas. Best known as a woodworker, Thomas branches out and fills the arts and culture incubator space with a combination of mobile, wall-mounted, and free-standing sculptures that act together with LED screens and digital projections. Inspired by her recent artist residency in Suriname and her aim to reveal the hidden soul of her pieces, Thomas finds new connections with her ancestors and challenges her own practice through works that are moving in more ways than one.

Before & After

Before & After is a solo exhibition by the Colorado Springs-based artist Rob Watt, currently on view at the Manitou Art Center’s Hagnauer Gallery. Composed of several thematic groupings of Watt’s small format cotton and silk embroidered artworks, the artist created most between 2019 and 2022, though the oldest is from 2009. Themes such as architecture, landscape, seasons, and history weave through this exhibit, fashioning a very interesting tapestry for the viewer.

The Beginning, in the land around me

The Beginning, in the land around me is an exhibition at the Gregory Allicar Museum of Art in Fort Collins featuring the work of multimedia artist Kei Ito. It showcases five interconnected series that the artist completed between 2020 and 2023. These pieces explore Ito’s nuclear heritage as a third generation hibakusha—the name given to victims of atomic bombings in Nagasaki and Hiroshima, Japan at the end of World War II. 

Dirty South

Curator Valerie Cassel Oliver has been excavating misunderstood but important distinctions in Southern material and sonic culture since she worked at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston. Her groundbreaking exhibition Dirty South: Contemporary Art, Material Culture, and the Sonic Impulse is currently on view at the Denver Museum of Contemporary Art (MCA) through February 5th. 

Ends + Beginnings

Ends + Beginnings centers on the general “relationship of terminus and origin” that each artist chooses to explore in their own particular way. Though disparate in terms of media used and themes presented, these works are very much in conversation with one another. Taken as a whole within the spare, well-appointed gallery space, it quickly becomes clear that while each contribution to this exhibition seeks to answer some version of the question “what does it mean to end and begin again?,” the responses vary widely in tone, ranging from barroom contemplations to elegiac reflections. Indeed, the work remains united in a sense of collective uncertainty that leaves ample space for possibility, reformulation, and empowerment. 

The Distance Between Words

For well over a decade, Joel Swanson has explored how language and technology structure our lives. His work has appeared in the Denver-land area, not to mention the Venice Biennale. As part of the entrepreneur Nicholas Pardon’s New Collection, a project-based arts initiative, artists Amber Cobb and Mario Zoots prompted Swanson to create the pieces that make up the current exhibition. The Distance Between Words is on view at Pardon’s private gallery The Vault.