2010
You are browsing the archive for 2010.
THE DIVERSITY PROJECT
CONCEPTUAL BRIEF
In 2007 the City of Boulder initiated its Community Dialogue as an opportunity for residents to express their experiences and thoughts about life in Boulder. The published findings from this study indicated that those who participated value what is an outdoor, active lifestyle in a spectacular natural environment [...]
SENSE BMoCA WITH DAWN SPENCER HURWITZ
[ January 20, 2011; 7:00 PM to 9:00 PM. ] Experience Stephen Batura’s work in a whole new way – through your sense of smell.
Stephen Batura: Edits
Denver artist Stephen Batura introduces a series of very new paintings based on collages made from fashion and design photography arranged in dynamic, digitally manipulated compositions that emerge at the intersection of realism and abstraction.
Barbara Shark: Moments In Between
“I make representational paintings of people and landscapes. With affection, attachment and curiosity, I depict likeness and the private faces of my subjects.” Barbara Shark, 2010
Donald Fodness & Alvin Gregorio: Shut Your Face Off!
Approaching BMoCA’s Union Works Gallery, visitors are transported to another place and time as they enter the environment created by Boulder artists Donald Fodness and Alvin Gregorio.
UPCYCLED: Spring/Summer 2010
UPCYCLED: Spring/Summer 2010 is a group exhibition of wearable art made from recycled materials, featuring the work of Judith Selby Lang, Sara Goldenberg, and the Wearable Shelter Project. Each of these works shows the hidden beauty and value in the detritus of our consumer society.
Humor & Pathos / Gary Sweeney
Humor & Pathos aptly describes Gary Sweeney’s approach to art and life in general. Contagiously charismatic with a refined taste for wittiness, Sweeney’s visual vocabulary includes common icons of popular culture, ranging from hand-painted advertisement and neon signs to television shows and road trip memorabilia.
Mi Frontera Es Su Frontera / Tony Ortega
Denver artist Tony Ortega has long been renowned for chronicling the richness of the Hispanic experience. He utilizes his signature style of bold coloration, simplified forms, anonymous figures and cultural icons to explore community life, family, urban and rural sectors, youth culture, popular culture and cultural politics.



