Category: ART
-

Don’t Blink Or You’ll Miss Electronic Art at Denver Art Museum!
Denver Art Museum ends its first exhibition ever of electronic media, Blink! on May 1. The exhibition, curated by Jill Desmond, includes 55 works, 40 from the DAM collection.
-

James Surls Curates Chinese and American Women (and Men)
James Surls described the incarnation of an art show that he and photographer Charles Dukes hatched during a Colorado blizzard, with the notion of featuring their wives, artists Charmaine Locke and Wang Nanfei.
-

What Do Chinese Women Artists Want? Panel at CU Boulder Spotlights Bicultural Exchange
Charles Dukes is an American photographer living in Beijing. It was he and James Surls who came up with the idea to have a collaborative exhibition and explore why being a woman artist comes with built in obstacles. Obstacles Segraves suggested we no longer have in America. Huh?
-

Press Relations for Creative Industry
Art Writer Leanne Goebel presented a workshop on Press Relations for Creative Industry at the Create Denver Expo.
-

Egyptian Artist Wael Shawky wins Ernst Schering Foundation Art Award
Egyptian artist Wael Shawky wins Ernst Schering Foundation Art Award. Art Writer Leanne Goebel recalls his controversial participation in SITE Santa Fe’s Lucky Number Seven biennial.
-

My Response to Rep. Scott Tipton (R-CO) about Arts Funding
Art Writer Leanne Goebel responds to a letter she received from Rep. Scott Tipton (R-CO) on the state of Arts Funding. Goebel is a board member with Arts For Colorado and her response appeared in their April newsletter.
-

Jason Thielke–Zero-Zero–Exhibition Essay for David B. Smith Gallery, Denver
Zero-Zero exhibition at David B. Smith Gallery in Denver features work by Jason Thielke. Art Writer Leanne Goebel explores the artist’s growth and shift in this exhibition essay.
-

The Bloody Past – and Hermann Nitsch’s Ecstasy | Adobe Airstream
Art Writer Leanne Goebel reviews Hermann Nitsch and Bloodlines at MCA Denver, curated by Simon Zalkind.
-

Vessels of Light and Color from Arts Perspective Magazine
Trefny Dix and Bengt Hokanson relocated their glass hot shop to Durango, Colorado. The two fine artists create cast-glass sculptural and mixed media works as well as a line of production blown glass vessels.
