Putting Colorado s benchmark 2020 fire season into perspective aspentimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from aspentimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Hours:
Closed Mondays
Installation view: Barbara Kasten, “Scenarios,” 2020.
Photo courtesy the AAM.
Mary Weatherford, “Blue Cut Fire,” 2017.
Flashe and neon on linen. 17 x 104 x 5 in.
Olivia Erlanger, “Roseville”, 2020
Plexiglass, architectural model, urethane resin, Dibond,
lichen, charcoal, wood, acrylic, paint, artificial snow #15
45 x 30 x 30 in.
Veit Laurent Kurz, “Window III (AOA Series),” 2018.
Acrylic, pen, chalk, ink and paper on canvas and wood.
The Aspen Art Museum (AAM) is an admission-free, globally engaged contemporary art museum, with community, education and member programs that provide ever-changing onsite and online exhibitions, workshops, and events.
Opened as the “Aspen Center for the Visual Arts” in 1979, the museum was officially accredited as the Aspen Art Museum in 1984. The AAM’s downtown building was designed by 2014 Pritzker Prize for Architecture winner Shigeru Ban and completed that same year with 100% private fun
Beetles are on the move in Aspen-area forests aspentimes.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from aspentimes.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Brucer Berger photographed at home in Aspen in 2005. (Aspen Times file)
Bruce Berger, author of “The Complete Half-Aspenite”and acclaimed works about the Southwest, died Wednesday at aged 82. (Aspen Times file)
Bruce Berger, the beloved writer, poet and fixture at Aspen Music Festival & School concerts, died Wednesday morning.
The cause was complications from lung disease, according to his publisher and literary executor, James Anderson. Berger was 82 and died in Denver in hospice care.
“Bruce was the unofficial dean of Aspen arts and letters,” Anderson said in an announcement, “and his Aspen cabin was a legendary gathering place for writers, physicists and musicians for more than 50 years.”