The Denver Post Names RedLine for Best Exhibitions of 2022

We’re so grateful and humbled to announce that RedLine was included in The Denver Post’s article “The best art exhibitions of 2022”!

As if that wasn’t enough, not one but two of our 2022 exhibitions were included in the roundup:

  1. End of Silence: A Punk Survey of Gregg Deal (August 2022)

  2. Carey Fisher, which is on display for one more week (November 11, 2022-January 8, 2023)

About the Exhibitions

End of Silence: A Punk Survey of Gregg Deal

Image credit: Wes Magyar

Gregg Deal’s End of Silence exhibition kicked off our Roots Radical 2022-2023 exhibition program. Roots Radical supports Native-led organizations and artists, and the deeper exploration of our communities’ collective ancestry and Indigenous histories.

Artist and Native American activist Gregg Deal has a lot to say and this show provided him, finally and fully, with an effective voice to express his ideas.
— Ray Mark Rinaldi, The Denver Post

We have many more Roots Radical exhibitions and programs coming up, including our Roots Radical Book Club (kicking off in February).

Learn more about our Roots Radical exhibition program >

Carey Fisher

Artist Ian Fisher

The Carey Fisher exhibition features Resident Artist alumni Beau Carey and Ian Fisher, curated by Cortney Lane Stell. Carey Fisher kicks off our other concurrent exhibition program: RedLine at 15.

In 2023, we’re celebrating our 15th Anniversary with exhibitions that honor our Resident Artist alumni and community artists who have shaped Denver’s rich artistic ecosystem throughout the years.

Explore upcoming RedLine at 15 exhibitions >

This outing is as much an event as it is an exhibition bringing together two of Denver best-admired landscape painters, Beau Carey and Ian Fisher, for a two-person show full of well-considered — and sometimes dazzling — scenes of nature.
— Ray Mark Rinaldi, The Denver Post

Last Week to Experience the Carey Fisher Exhibition

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. 

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

On display through Sunday, January 8 - plan your visit now!

Learn more >