The Denver Post Highlights "Carey Fisher" Exhibition

“Beau Carey and Ian Fisher are among the region’s most prolific and popular painters.”

- Ray Mark Rinaldi, The Denver Post

What better way to spend the holiday break than getting lost in gorgeously imaginative, wonderfully detailed, grand-scale landscape paintings at your favorite contemporary art center?

This holiday break, stop by RedLine to experience the Carey Fisher exhibition, featuring Resident Artist Alumni Beau Carey and Ian Fisher, curated by Cortney Lane Stell.

On display through January 8, 2023, this show is sure to inspire rumination and relaxation for everyone in your party — two very welcome emotions during the year’s most hectic season!

But don’t just take our word for it — ask arts critic writer Ray Mark Rinaldi of The Denver Post.

Rinaldi recently reviewed the Carey Fisher exhibition, and had lovely things to say about Carey and Fisher’s pieces, as well as Stell’s curatorial process for the show.

...They deal in fictions, painting from photos but adjusting the details as it suits them, or combining various vistas into one view, or mixing time, place and space. They are very much 21st-century humans: remixers, cut-and-pasters, Photoshoppers, image-makers, global villagers.
— Ray Mark Rinaldi, The Denver Post

Experience the Carey Fisher Exhibition Today

Building off the long history of landscape painting, the work of Carey and Fisher mark a remarkable transformation due to our changing relationship with the natural world and the issue of climate change.

In the light of this effectual relationship, both Carey and Fisher’s paintings remind us equally of the environment, the supple qualities of paint, and the lens of our own perspectives. 

Artists Beau Carey (left) and Ian Fisher (right)

At the opening reception of Carey Fisher. Image Credit Adrienne Kendall.

This exhibition marks the first of several exhibitions that celebrate RedLine’s 15th year anniversary. It features entirely new works created this year — almost all of them explicitly for this exhibition.

The show will feel meditative in tone, and works will be hung sparsely to allow for reflection and digestion.