This year,
RedLine is presenting
She Crossed the Line, a year of art and ideas that will underscore the role of women as artistic innovators and cultural leaders.
The series is designed to honor the creativity of trailblazing women artists through exhibitions, programs and events.
The series includes:
- A New Attitude: Chen Man’s Provocative Interpretations of Contemporary Chinese Women through April 27. Man mixes visual elements from China's past with contemporary art and culture, combining photography with new-media.
- Senga Nengudi: The Performing Body from June 6-July 20. The exhibition explores Nengudi's improvisational performances created since the 1970s, blending aspects of sculpture and performance, melding the body in movement with everyday materials such as plastic sheeting, nylon mesh, masking tape and sand.
- Harmony Hammond: Becoming/Unbecoming Monochrome from Aug. 2-Sept. 28. The exhibit will juxtapose Hammond's "weave paintings" from the late 1970s with striking examples of her recent large-scale nearly monochromatic works.
- Surveying Judy Chicago: 1970-2014 from Oct. 17-Dec. 28. The exhibition links Chicago's more recent work to earlier themes and highlights the continued primacy of social and political concerns in the diverse projects she has completed in the last decade.
Located at 2350 Arapahoe St. in Arapahoe Square, RedLine is a center for contemporary art that combines an artist residency program with project-based community engagement in the arts.
Contact Confluence Denver Development News Editor Margaret Jackson with tips and leads for future stories at margaret@confluence-denver.com.
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