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Anderman Photography Lecture: Conversation with Jungjin Lee

Jungjin Lee embraces a meditative approach to photography and creates pictures that encourage reflection. Her poetic images, often made in nature among deserts, mountains, water, trees, and through a meticulous printing process, are expressions of her feelings and her relationship with the world around.

Jungjin Lee began making photographs while studying ceramics in Seoul, South Korea and went on to earn her MFA in photography at New York University. Throughout a nearly forty-year career, her work has been widely exhibited, collected, and has been the subject of many thoughtful photobooks. Jungjin Lee lives and works in New York City.

Anderman Photography Lecture: Zora J. Murff

Photographer and educator Zora J. Murff creates pictures of people and the urban and natural environments that surround them. For some projects, he also incorporates appropriated imagery to reflect on his own experiences and to examine social and racial injustices. His work considers minimized histories, experiences of being a Black person in America, and the ways visual culture shapes and is shaped by us.

Zora J. Murff’s monograph True Colors (or, Affirmations in a Crisis) was published by Aperture in 2022 and he received a prestigious Infinity Award from the International Center for Photography in 2023. Currently, he is Assistant Professor of Photography at University of Oregon.

This program is presented in connection with the photography exhibition What We’ve Been Up To: People , February 8 – September 29, 2026.

Annual Membership Meeting

All members are invited to attend the DAM's Annual Membership Meeting. RSVP required.

August 3-7 | Art and Nature (ages 7-8)

From materials to inspiration, nature shows up in art in all kinds of ways. This week, we’ll think about the connection between art and the environment as we explore the galleries. By the end of the week, you’ll be able to take home some nature-inspired artwork of your own!

August 3-7 | Games, World-Building, and Art, Oh My! (ages 9-11)

This week, campers dive into the creative overlap of games, storytelling, and art. Inspired by historical artworks, they’ll invent characters, design worlds, and bring new ideas to life through hands-on projects.

August 3-7 | Mixed Media Mayhem (ages 7-8)

Experiment with all kinds of media, from paint to paper to fabric and more! Play with materials and ideas like a true artist and take–home art inspired by the many genres and materials seen in the museum’s diverse collections.

August 3-7 | The ABCs of Art (ages 5-6)

In this camp for our youngest museum friends, we’ll explore the basics of art! We’ll learn all about textures, shapes, lines, and more through games, stories, and of course art projects!

Conversation Pieces: Stories from the Fashion Archives with Jill D'Alessandro

Join Jill D’Alessandro, Director and Curator of the Avenir Institute of Textile Arts and Fashion, for a behind-the-scenes look at Conversation Pieces: Stories from the Fashion Archives.  Showcasing nearly 70 designs, the exhibition explores DAM’s permanent fashion collection, pairing the historic with the avant-garde to create surprising juxtapositions.  In this talk, D’Alessandro will share a few of the stories behind these garments and how they entered the museum’s holdings.

Creativity in Practice Mini Institute

Creativity in Practice is the DAM³ professional development for early childhood educators designed to increase their confidence in incorporating art and creativity in the classroom. This two-day institute offers 7 hours of professional development credit through Colorado Shines PDIS.

Sessions:

Teacher Art Identity: Reflecting on teacher identity in relation to art and creativity.

Teaching for Artistic Behavior (TAB): Introduction to TAB techniques and materials.

Art, Drama & Storytelling: Incorporating drama and storytelling with art and creativity to foster social emotional learning.

Teacher Lesson Planning with Objects and Artworks: Introduction to using objects and artworks at the museum to meet early childhood learning objectives.

Dates:

February 28th | 10am´pm

March 1st | 10am-3pm

In-person at the DAM.

If you teach a Title I or Head Start school, you qualify for a 50% discount on the Creativity in Practice Mini Institute. Family Friends and Family homeschool educators qualify for additional discounts as well. Please email Claudia Munoz cmunoz@denverartmuseumn.org for more information on discounted registration.

Donation

Give to the Denver Art Museum's Annual Fund

Your 100% tax-deductible contribution supports inspiring art connections, powerful artist collaborations, community-minded programming at the Denver Art Museum. During these unprecedented times, your donation helps the museum reimagine how we connect in person and online through a series of new opportunities for visitors of all ages. Thank you for your support of the Denver Art Museum's annual fund.

How Do We Art? Session 2 - Clay: From Earth to Art (2/21)

One of our oldest art forms, humans have created objects from clay across cultures, geography, and time. What exactly is clay, and how have artists used this foundational, universal medium to tell stories, connect with the spirits, and create functional (and beautiful) objects? Explore porcelain, earthenware, stoneware, and other ceramic mediums and processes as we consider the many roles clay has played in society.

This is session two of How Do We Art? Materials, Methods, and the Stories They Tell. Purchase the full three session course here.

 

How Do We Art? Session 3 - Prints: How Ink & Paper Changed the World (3/7)

Celebrate Denver’s Month of Printmaking (Mo’Print) with a deep dive into printmaking processes and histories. Pre-social media, printmaking revolutionized communication, access to images, and creative expression. In this session, learn about printmaking techniques (engraving, woodcut, lithography, screenprint, and more), and consider how prints have helped us to rally for a cause, advertise, document, and share beauty.

This is session three of How Do We Art? Materials, Methods, and the Stories They Tell. Purchase the full three session course here.

Ink & Thread: Exhibition Tour + Curatorial Meet & Greet

Museum Friends are invited to a special evening exploring Ink & Thread: Codices and the Art of Storytelling.

The program begins with a small reception and a chance to meet members of the curatorial team. Guests will then enjoy a curator-led tour offering insights into ancient Mesoamerican codices and their influence on contemporary works by Enrique Chagoya and Eric Garcia. The tour will also highlight Leslie Tillett’s monumental tapestry and the newly gifted preparatory studies that illuminate his research process. The evening offers a focused look at how artists across time have used codices to record histories, reinterpret narratives, and communicate cultural memory.

Insight: Conserving Across Exhibitions

You are invited to come and listen to, and ask questions about what DAM conservators have been treating in the conservation laboratories for current and upcoming exhibitions. At the Kirkland Museum, travel back to the 1950s, 60s, and 70s in Space is the Place. See the paintings, furniture, and furnishings from this era that we worked on. On the sixth floor of the Martin Building, Conversation Pieces, highlights the work of our textile conservators and fashion from the collection. Learn about how we collaborated with tribal advisors for the upcoming Blackfeet exhibition. Plus more!

July 13-17 | Activate Your Inner Architect (ages 9-11)

Be an architect in training and explore how superstar architects Daniel Libeskind and Gio Ponti design buildings for art using angles and patterns. Pull ideas from great downtown architecture and get inspired to design your own buildings.

July 13-17 | Color Pop! (ages 5–6)

Color surrounds us, but we don’t always notice its effect on the world around us. This week, we will slow down and think about how artists use color to express feelings and ideas. Explore the galleries, get creative in the workshop, and fall down the rainbow rabbit hole!

July 13-17 | Sculpt This, Sculpt That (ages 7-8)

From clay vessels to abstract sculptures, we have it all in the museum! We’ll take what we see in the gallery and apply it to our art in the workshop. At the end of the week, you’ll have all kinds of sculptures to share with family and friends!

July 13-17 | Story in Focus (ages 12-14)

Use photography to tell a story your way. You’ll experiment with framing, sequencing, and point of view while looking at how artists use images to capture people, moments, and ideas. Inspired by What We’ve Been Up To: People and other works in the museum, you’ll create a photo series that builds a narrative across multiple images.

July 20-24 | Art Around the World (ages 9-11)

Pack your imagination and get your art passport ready! This week, we’ll explore artwork from cultures across the globe. Each stop on our journey inspires a new hands-on project back in the workshop, letting campers create their own world of art.

July 20-24 | Beyond the Brush (ages 12-14)

Break the rules of painting! This workshop is all about experimenting with color, texture, and materials beyond traditional painting. You’ll explore mixed media techniques, layer unexpected materials, and take inspiration from artists like Cornelius Annor and Susan Wick while figuring out what works through trial, error, and process.

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