Dialogue and Defiance

Guest curator Valerie Hellstein had her work cut out for her with the exhibition Dialogue and Defiance. The exhibition tries to qualify Clyfford Still’s notorious “defiance” of the artworld by emphasizing the “dialogue” between him and his contemporaries—those who came to be called the Abstract Expressionists. Still, though, would no more have admitted to having been in dialogue with his peers than he would have wanted an art critic to review his paintings.

2024 Fiber Art Colorado

This year’s All Colorado Show is 2024 Fiber Art Colorado, juried by Cecily Cullen, the Director and Curator of Metropolitan State University’s Center for Visual Art. Bringing together 75 artworks by 49 artists from across the state — some of whom are members of the guild — the show quite literally fills the entire exhibition space, spanning three rooms with weavings, sculptural pieces, clothing, and more. 

X.v

The artists in the group exhibition X.v, celebrating the tenth anniversary of Michael Warren Contemporary in Denver, have tapped into an elemental energy to create works of spirited material exploration. Grounded in process-led practices, they traverse the range of physical realities, from scorched paper to powder coated steel.

Tracking Time

The Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art (BMoCA) is currently hosting the exhibition Tracking Time, which will be on view until September 2, 2024. This show presents the works of two artists—Chelsea Kaiah and Noelle Phares—who address the pressing ecological issues surrounding the Colorado River.

A Hand in Nature

If there is a unifying message to be gleaned from A Hand in Nature, a show dizzying in its thematic and material scope, it is this: try as we might to control it, the natural world has a life of its own. The pandemic forced us into this realization four years ago when a coronavirus tore open every fissure in our social fabric, but while COVID exposed us to the dark side of nonhuman agency, Gala Porras-Kim opens our eyes to its poetry.

Sister Rosetta

Sister Rosetta Tharpe was the “first guitar heroine of rock & roll,” in the words of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. [1] But for all her undeniable contributions to American music history, Tharpe is still not quite widely known. “I couldn’t believe more people weren’t familiar with her,” says Chloé Duplessis. “I resolved then to begin researching her life, with the intention of telling the story of this American music pioneer and founder of rock-n-roll.”

Resist: Tie Dye Practices Around the World

The exhibition Resist at the Avenir Museum of Design and Merchandising in Fort Collins centers on the artistry of shaped resist dyeing—a technique in which the cloth is manipulated through folding, tying, twisting, and binding—where textiles become canvases for artisans to imprint their movements and memories. The garments on display represent cultures across space and time, from India to Guatemala, starting in the late nineteenth century to present day.

OSCILLATIONS

The latest exhibition at SeeSaw Gallery, “Oscillations,” features four artists who unravel their connections to place and demonstrate the interplay between instinct and honed technical skills. While each brings a unique perspective to the show, curator Hayley Schneider expertly weaves together a cohesive and harmonious collection featuring Leslie Fitzsimmons, Jamie Gray, Ilan Gutin, and Autumn T. Thomas. The result is an atmosphere of serenity that ignites introspection, contemplation about the artmaking process, and commentary on the relationship between artists and their materials.

Ungrafting

Hương Ngôs Ungrafting at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center focuses on the politics of visibility in the context of French colonial knowledge production in Vietnam. The exhibition examines how power shapes what is seen and what is made to be unseen. 

We CU: A Visual Celebration of Black Womanhood, Presence, and Connectedness

The We CU: A Visual Celebration of Black Womanhood, Presence, and Connectedness exhibition, presented by The Museum for Black Girls, unfolds as an extensive and profound exploration of the influence of Black women on the concept of “home.” Curators Charlie Billingsly and Von Ross have masterfully assembled an installation that captivates visually while also inspiring deep reflection. Through the show, they urge visitors to contemplate the substantial, yet frequently underestimated, contributions of Black women in shaping both familial and cultural frameworks.

I belong in a museum

I belong in a museum: Colorado Women Artist Museum Members Exhibition, Part 1, currently on show in D’art Gallery East, is the museum’s third exhibition since its formation in August of 2023. Curated by Carrie MaKenna, Rebecca Gabriel, and Carlene Frances, the exhibition features work by over 20 artist members of the museum ranging in medium, style, and theme.

Quicksand

Twisted forms, heavy with their own weight, aspirationally stretch and strain towards sweaty pastel gradients in Sarah Bowling’s current exhibition at Rule Gallery. Titled Quicksand, the expressively saggy sculptures and textured paintings grapple with the quiet ache of transformation. 

Amidst the corporate sterilization of pastel tints in the past decade, Quicksand comes as a refreshing reminder of color’s more transcendental potential. Bowling’s neon pastel palette resembles the luminous transitional time of a California sunrise. She balances the more buoyant creamsicle cloudscapes with psychologically heavy plaster voids. 

Apis Opus Encaustic Invitational

The artist-run gallery NKollectiv is currently hosting its second annual encaustic invitational, which showcases the work of sixteen Colorado artists specializing in this ancient art form. Named Apis Opus, the exhibition cleverly combines the world of bees and art, highlighting beeswax as the primary medium in encaustic work. Encaustic is made by heating layers of beeswax mixed with pigment and applying it to different substrates. 

Ways to Leave (Save) Earth

Currently on view in the artist-run space of neü folk, Ways to Leave (Save) Earth is a group exhibition curated by Dani/elle Cunningham that invites viewers to ponder the bleak, multifaceted realities of current and future space travels. Like warp drives and wormholes, this strange and thoughtful exhibition is not without its conceptual and practical faults. However, its deep and personal Earthbound narratives do help shine a truthful, if unpleasant, light on what’s really going on above our heads.

Albert Chong

Albert Chong is perhaps the most acclaimed photography, installation, and sculpture artist in Colorado who you’ve never heard of. His long and illustrious career includes pieces that he hopes, as his artist statement proclaims, “[give] expression to [his] human visual intuition, [operating] at levels inhospitable to verbal or literary expression.”

Trying to get all my birds to land in the yard

Mychaelyn Michalec’s first major solo exhibition at K Contemporary showcases new directions and experiments in her fiber paintings. Trying to get all my birds to land in the yard is made up of shifting organic forms and allegorical, collaged compositions. With these new works, the artist examines the cultural and historical uses of avian symbolism to articulate womanhood, domestic life, and freedom.

Silver Park

Silver Park is a bit of magic nestled on a side street near downtown Pueblo. In the summer of 2020, the artist Bob Marsh began coating the façade of a disused stucco rowhouse in silver paint and silver-coated objects and sculptures.

Nightwalks

As twilight descends upon Denver, Alexander Richard Wilson’s exhibition Nightwalks fills the walls of Dateline gallery with painted homages to a city in transition. Each canvas is a love letter and eulogy to the city’s changing façade, where the historic neon glow now flickers in the shadow of impending modernity.