Storm Warning Opening Reception
Join us for the opening reception of Storm Warning: Artists on Climate Change March 9th, 5-8pm Reception is free and open to the public. Refreshments provided.
Join us for the opening reception of Storm Warning: Artists on Climate Change March 9th, 5-8pm Reception is free and open to the public. Refreshments provided.
Escape into virtual reality at the Hypercube – C – Cubed Studios Featuring VR artist Cabbibo March 7th, 2017 11am – 6pm.
March 9th 2017 – 7:30 pm – Newman Center DakhaBrakha means “give-take” in old Slavonic. This breathtaking and mesmerizing band from Ukraine draws on folk melodies and rhythms, and combines voice, cello, accordion, and drums in a refreshingly novel vision of Eastern European roots music. They craft stunningly beautiful and exciting sonic worlds for traditional songs, reinventing their heritage with a keen ear for contemporary, international tastes. They have become a cult phenomenon around the world. “Ukrainian folkdrone Björkpunk quartet DakhaBrakha went into Bonnaroo as unknowns but ended up with one of the most receptive crowds of the weekend…, turning...
Thursday, February 23, 2017 Curator Richard Rinehart will be visiting DU on Thursday, February 23rd, 5-6:30 pm, to discuss our current exhibit, “Dusk to Dusk: Unsettled, Unraveled, Unreal.” We’re incredibly lucky to have him visit our gallery before “Dusk to Dusk” leaves us–you don’t want to miss this event! Richard Rinehart is Director and Chief Curator of the Samek Art Gallery & Downtown Art Gallery at Bucknell University. He has served as Digital Media Director & Adjunct Curator at the UC Berkeley Art Museum and as curator at New Langton Arts and for the San Jose Arts Commission. He juried...
Jan. 5 – March 6 – Museum of Anthropology An expansion of a pop-up exhibit that was on display at the Denver Art Museum in November and December, “One November Morning,” running Jan. 5–March 6 at the University of Denver Museum of Anthropology, is a collection of works by five Cheyenne-Arapaho artists who are descendants of victims of the Sand Creek Massacre. The exhibit is their collective response to the massacre, which happened 150 years ago when University of Denver founder John Evans was governor of the Colorado Territory.
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