Author Archives: Denver Art Matters

Where is this?

I am flabbergasted. No one knew the answer to last week’s random public sculpture. You can still win the ticket to The Kirkland Museum, so go on, give it an educated guess.

And since no one knew the artist nor the location of last week’s art,  I thought I’d switch gears and slap you with a mural. This colorful narrative smiles down on folks from the West side of a building in downtown. Do you know where it is?  (the images seen are only a partial snippet of the whole work of art)

Hint:

The mural could be in Jackson Square.

First person to get the building and street correct, I’ll send you a ticket to the Museum of Contemporary Art / MCA.

IMG_2077

How to Make a Baby, by photographer Patrice Laroche

This is the cutest most clever photo shoot project I’ve seen in a long time. It was sent to me via email.

Enjoy.

I always wondered…finally the truth reveals itself.
Canadian photographer Patrice Laroche surely will have no trouble explaining
to his kids about the birds and the bees. During his wife Sandra Denis’ pregnancy,
the artist created hilarious explanatory photo series titled “How to Make a Baby”.
The creative couple planned and carried out their project throughout the whole
period of 9 months, taking pictures in the exact same settings as Sandra’s belly
expanded.  The pregnancy saga of Sandra and Patrice basically denounces all the
traditional cabbage and the stork stories.
how-to-make-a-baby-patrice-laroche-1
how-to-make-a-baby-patrice-laroche-2
how-to-make-a-baby-patrice-laroche-3
how-to-make-a-baby-patrice-laroche-4
how-to-make-a-baby-patrice-laroche-5
how-to-make-a-baby-patrice-laroche-6
how-to-make-a-baby-patrice-laroche-7
.
.

Catch Me If You Can coming to the Buell

Opening night February 26 – March 10, 2013. 

Denver Center for Performing Arts, www.denvercenter.org, 303-893-4100

Based on the DreamWorks film and the incredible true story that inspired it, Catch Me if You Can tells the story of Frank W. Abagnale, Jr., a teenager who runs away from home in search of the glamorous life. With nothing more than boyish charm, imagination and forged checks, Frank lives the high life until he catches the attention of the FBI and finds himself in deep, deep trouble. dcpa.org

Catch-Me-Logo

14th & Curtis, Denver

Forever Plaid is forever good

I was invited to the Littleton Town Hall Arts Center Theatre last night for the beloved musical,Forever Plaid.”   The stage is intimate and cozy and so is  downtown Littleton. What a quaint, little  mecca Littleton is.

Last night’s performance of this favorite 1950’s era show was delightfully fun, well choreographed and the casting superb. Frankie, played by Mark Middlebrooks; Jinx, Barret Harper; Smudge, Jacob Villareal; Sparky, Tim Howard, made up  the four Plaids . Each in their own right exuded the polish and talent of  well-trained, experienced performers. Musical Director and pianist, Donna Debreceni,  pounded the ivories  with pizzaz  and was accompanied by Austin Hein on the Bass. The small ensemble was tight including the singers who took control of the stage, the vocals and shananigans . The re-enacted Ed Sullivan Show was a hoot.  It was a fun evening. 

plaid_7                plaid_10-1

L to R: Frankie, Smudge, Sparky, Jinx.

 Get acquainted with Littleton and sing your heart out to Crazy Bout  Ya Baby, Sixteen Tons, Catch a Falling Star, Caribbean Plaid (Day Oh song), Shangri-La, Rags to Riches , Love is a Many Splendored Thing, among others. As we were leaving humming and singing softly, our aisle companion looked at us, smiled and shrugged, “These were all the songs we listened to in college.” Bless her heart, it was a wonderful evening of theatre, laughter and song.

Town Hall Arts Center, 2450 W. Main, Littleton. 303-794-2787. www.townhallartscenter.com

FOREVER PLAID runs through February 10, that’s tomorrow.  Catch the last performance at 2:00 p.m. tomorrow.

Bet you know this one

Last week’s  art contest was  a little difficult but you guys came through.  Congratulations to Laura Phelps Rogers who correctly identified the contemporary work of  Dr. Abe Vigil, titled, “Valedictorian,” 1972, at Governor’s Park, Pearl and 7th Avenue.

Here’s the clue for this week’s mystery sculpture’s  title, artist, and locale.

Great pickings here where the fruit hangs  plentiful, lush and high. 

IMG_2058

 

 

For the first person who gets the artist, title and locale correct, I will send you one admission ticket to the Vance Kirkland Museum.  I need to buy 4 for you lucky winners. Thank you for joining in the fun at Denver Art Matters. Next week I’ll surprise you with different tickets to a different museum.  Have a great weekend.  : )

 

Tagged ,

And the art world soars financially.

Steve Wynn Paid $33.7 Million For Jeff Koons‘ Gigantic ‘Tulips’ Sculpture

Julie Zeveloff | Feb. 4, 2013, 11:20 AM | 

Jeff Koons’ giant steel sculpture “Tulips” sold to an anonymous buyer for $33.7 million during Christie’s post-war and contemporary art sale last fall.

It turns out the buyer was hotel mogul Steve Wynn, who unveiled the three-ton sculpture in the rotunda of the Wynn Theater in Las Vegas last week, The Las Vegas Review-Journal reported.

Wynn is a prolific art collector. He was rumored to have spent $40 million on Dale Chiluly’s glass-blown masterpiece “Fiori di Como, which hangs from the ceiling of the lobby at the Bellagio, and spent a record $12.8 million on a pair of Chinese vases to display in his Macau resort.

He also notoriously put his elbow through Picasso’sLe Rêve,” for which he paid around $60 million.

Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/steve-wynn-bought-jeff-koons-tulips-2013-2#ixzz2K2UmDpm8

FYI: I hear it’s warm down there

get-attachment-2

AWARD-WINNING SCOTTSDALE ARTS FESTIVALSHINES MARCH 8–10

200 Awe-Inspiring Artists

Outdoors at Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts

 

 Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts will present the 43rd annual Scottsdale Arts Festival on Friday, Saturday and Sunday, March 8–10, in Scottsdale Civic Center Park.

Named one of the top arts festivals in the nation by the readers of AmericanStyle Magazine and “Best Arts Festival” by Phoenix New Times, the Scottsdale Arts Festival showcases nearly 200 jury-selected artists from throughout the United States and Canada who work in painting, sculpture, glass and ceramics, jewelry, photography and more. Works of art are available for purchase directly from the artists and through the Festival’s online art auction.

get-attachment-3

ADMISSION AND INFORMATION

Admission to the Scottsdale Arts Festival is $8 for adults, $5 for students and free for children 12 and under and members of Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts and SMoCA. Parking and trolley service are free. A two-day pass is available for $12. Tickets may be purchased in advance through ScottsdaleArtsFestival.org or (480) 499-TKTS (8587), or at any Festival entrance on the day of the event. (Pets are not allowed, except for trained service animals.) Proceeds benefit the programs of Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts.


Tagged , ,

Where is this piece of Art and Who is the Artist?

2012-04-08 16.57.42

The identity and locale of this piece will be more difficult than last week’s mystery art.

O.K. art lovers prove me wrong.

Hint:

Children & dogs love to play here.  Brides say Ooh, LaLa’s.

First person to respond with the correct artist’s name and locale wins 2 tickets to the Vance Kirkland Museum.

Tagged , ,

Dr. Jekyll was on American Idol!

Playing at the Buell Theatre through February 10, 2013, JEKYLL & HYDE, starring Tony Award nominee Constantine Maroulis, (American Idol finalist in the fourth season) as Dr. Henry Jekyll and Edward Hyde and Grammy Award nominee and R&B star Deborah Cox as Lucy.

Home_page_rotator_JekyllHyde.sflb

Speaking from the heart, Jekyll & Hyde was not on my list of shows I was dying to see. Certainly I didn’t have the anticipation I had for Memphis, or in the past for Mamma Mia!, Legally Blonde, Ain’t Misbehavin’, The Boyfriend, and next up, Catch Me, If You Can. My taste in theatre is simple and lively. Give me dancing and singing to music I can pat my foot to and leave me wishing I had been on that stage.

Here was my state of mind last week. The flu had me on my ass for weeks.  I lost my glasses the week before. When I opened an email on Tuesday, about the opening of J & H, that night, I should have known. Nevertheless, I got myself together to go that night. I figured I’d take cough drops and a water bottle for precaution. I called my ever ready theatre companion Therese, who was up for it. We found a great parking space. We walked down to the theatre complex. I commented how odd it seemed. It felt eerily dead. There was some bustling activity at the Buell, so we kept walking, but soon discovered it was a private USBank event. Hmm. All the posters said Jeykll & Hyde Opening January 29. I checked my phone for the email. Yep, wrong night. We made an about face and went to Desserts for what else? It was so crowded we left, then went to Natural Grocers to get cold medicine. By this time it was 8:00. We parked. Looked at the store hours posted on the door. Close at 8:04 p.m., open at 9:06 a.m. Is that weird? Therese had just enough time to slip through the door and make her purchase. Determined to save the night, we ended up at Racine’s with a bowl of warm peach cobbler and ice cream. The next night (in line with my whacky week) Chip & I went to Bayou Bob’s to hear David Booker. We were in-sync, Booker was playing, we agreed.  We walk in, no set up. No kidding. Booker played the night before. Talk about confusion. Glad that week is over.

So last night was the official Jekyll & Hyde opening. Parking was normal. There were few open spaces so we knew we were there on opening night. We had marvelous seats. We hunkered down with little enthusiasm. Next thing we knew it was intermission. We looked at each with total surprise and knew we had made a great decision.

Jekyll & Hyde was mesmerizing. It is based on the novella “The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde,” by Robert Louis Stevenson.  

The musical is a dark and dangerous love story about a London doctor who accidentally unleashes his evil personality in his quest to cure his father’s mental illness.  Constantine Maroulis is excellent.  The audience is witness to his miraculous transformation on stage as he morphs from the kind Dr. Jeykll into a raunchy Mr. Hyde. It was visually effective when he loosened his long, curly locks to become the menacing Mr. Hyde. With one toss of his head, the hair tumbled down turning him into a disheveled, wild, angry, aggressive man. Deborah Cox was the tasty eye candy plucked down in the middle of this somber black, green, red, hints of blue set. All brilliantly created for maximum atmosphere indicative of a dreary turn of the century London.

The story is a cross between an angry, vengeful Robin Hood (taking out people who are perceived as useless and self-absorbed, for the good of mankind), and the sad tale of star-crossed lovers. You know how a story like this ends. But, you must see it in person to experience the strong, melodic voices that tell this strange, stirring story.

For tickets call 303-893-4100. denvercenter.org

Space Theatre: Grace, or The Art of Climbing

Plays through February 17, 2013.

SPACE THEATRE, DCPA COMPLEX

420x240grace.sflb

Denver was the proud host for the premiere of Lauren Feldman‘s “Grace, or The Art of Climbing.” 

It’s the story of a young twenty-five old woman who finds herself back home in South Florida living with her father. She is depressed, tired, frustrated and irritated with herself and her life thus far. As a child, Emm and her Dad practiced rock climbing in the garage as an indoor athletic endeavor – no natural rock climbing in Miami. Dad thought wisely that learning to grip, hold and breathe onto the side of a rock would teach life lessons in tenacity, courage and strength. Well, as Emm mopes and whines and sleeps at home, Dad gets her butt out of bed and into the garage for old times sake.

The play is about creating a life and picking yourself up by your belay and getting to the next ledge. Never let go and always know where you are going are two rules of climbing. Emm struggles with ambition to do anything and to find will power along her path. She wants to become a person who knows where she is going and can work to eventually reach that goal. Even if whining and discouragement are a part of the growth.

A play of metaphors for life. The flashbacks take the audience into Emm’s former life, her lovers, loses and friendships. Feldman’s dialogue  creatively combines Dane Laffrey‘s incredible metaphorical rock climbing sets with one person’s self-doubt. This person discovers the stepping stones to self-confidence. There is no intermission. It couldn’t happen. The flow and emotion of the show must continually advance from start to finish uninterrupted. Otherwise, the grace of climbing would be lost.

I thought Climbing had the most beautiful ending. When Emm finds her graceful rhythm for rock climbing and the realization of where she is going. John Hutton plays her dad. He is always superb. Alejandro Rodriquez debuts as Sims, her climbing coach and Emm, played by Julie Jesneck, form a harmonic ensemble. Their acting mastery strengthens a well constructed storyline. The set was simple and perfect.

TICKETS MAY BE PURCHASED BY CALLING 303-893-4100, OR VISITING www.denvercenter.org.

Tagged , ,
Musing

A blog by Parnassus Books

Navy Blue Heaven

A Little Slice Of Cowboys Heaven

The Cool Muse / La Musa Molona

"The Cool Muse: Proudly tormenting friends and family with paintings of doubtful quality since MMII" "

Jazz in a Minute

Discover trending and amazing Funky Jazzy artists. Definitely not another mainstream music blog.

Splatter Craze

Get crazy about being creative!

Dear Denver

I've been thinking so much about you...

Peter ILLIG's Blog

Art-making in Denver

A Stairway To Fashion

imagination is the key

this is... The Neighborhood

the Story within the Story

Artwork of Jenna Koenning

Inspired by the natural sciences, I use landscape painting as a means to express issues of personal importance.

Author Adrienne Morris

Step Into the Past—Lose Yourself in the Story.

artthatmeansbusiness

Smile! You’re at the best WordPress.com site ever

you can observe a lot just by watching

thoughts and insights into the worlds of television and film

Vernacularisms

Notes from Belfast