CultureHaus Saturday Night at DAM
On Saturday night the DOD boys (and a very good lady friend of ours) attended CultureHaus’s big event at the Denver Art Museum: a celebration of the current DAM exhibit, Embrace, a multi-media show in which 17 artists have taken over the Libeskind-designed Hamilton Wing with their installations.
CultureHaus bills itself as the DAM-affiliated educational and social organization for the “young at heart” to appreciate art. They sponsor talks and social functions for their members, and for anyone else willing to buy a ticket. This particular event was probably attended by between 200 and 300 people and it was a relatively young crowd. It was also a badly dressed crowd. Or, at the very least, it was a crowd that had taken this opportunity – oh so rare in Denver – to dress up! Now in many ways we applaud this as there is far too little dressing up done in the relentlessly casual Mile High City, but sometimes people get a little carried away. There were a number of young and not-so-young women who had worn skin-tight or skin-baring clothing that seemed more appropriate to wearing out to “the club.” It was just a little too well lit at the DAM for this sort of attire: lots of strappy, slinky dresses and what one friend of mine calls “novelty tops”: minimalist blouses of somewhat complicated construction that do not really resemble blouses in the traditional sense. The men tended toward a uniform of jeans, blazer, and button-down shirt, the DOD boys among them. Some paired this with ties; most did not. One intrepid fashion innovator even paired his with a small mink stole (more on this below). One trend I have been noting of late is the blazer with deconstructed or unfinished edges that almost look fringe-like with threads hanging from every edge. I’m not yet sure what I think about this. On the other hand, I do know what I think about blazers with all kinds of graphics all over the back, including words and phrases and images (eagles and falcons tend to predominate). I saw one last weekend in SF with the word “Arrogant” in huge letters across the shoulders. Horrible. Unsightly. Unfortunate.
I could go on about the art – and indeed we took a stroll through the exhibits, one of which, “The Bathers” by John McEnroe, is featured above – but I’m just not very good at talking about art. That’s Alastair’s department but he seems to be silent of late. Instead let me discuss the food. The passed appetizers (how I love a passed appetizer!) were quite tasty: mini crabcakes, barely seared tuna with wasabi on salty chips, and mini cheeseburgers. Very nice. But the stationary appetizer stations were a disappointment: the customary vegetable and cheese plates, pita and hummus (really!?), and great big chafing dishes of meatballs in sauce. Snore. My great complaint of the evening, however, has to be the fact that while the event ended at 10, the bars closed at 9:30. Employees were literally packing up even as the party continued on, and some of us wanted a refill!
Post party many headed over to the Living Room, a spacious bar on Broadway, for cocktails. It was crowded and sometimes difficult to get the bartenders’ attention, but otherwise quite fun. The highlight, however, occurred at the end of the evening. Mink-stole boy (MSB) had also migrated to the Living Room and ‘round about midnight seemed to have gotten into something of a scuffle with another patron who had either made fun of – or actually interfered with; I wasn’t sure – the stole. MSB was not going to take this lying down. I had a front row seat as he got up in the face of the mink anti-fan: “You don’t mess with the mink stole! This was my grandmother’s mink stole! You want to take this outside? Come on buddy, let’s take this outside.” A puffy-haired, white-loafer-sporting, mink-stole-wearing aesthete screaming about his grandmother’s fur and threatening to take out another bar patron is not something I expect to see again soon. In short, it was fantastic. Who knew this was possible in Denver?
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Happy Monday and hope you fellas are staying warm. The DAM party was indeed a place to throw back a couple of cocktails. Several of my friends were hosting the event and I believe they had fun and with great success.
Yes it is vintage, yes it was from the fox hunt and yes I am straight. Fun I know. I did offer to purchase a drink as a gentleman for the yahoo who threw my mink on the floor as I waited to kick the shit out of him. Art, cocktails, a 400 lb bodyguard / driver in a Lincoln towncar, cute ladies, a light snack and a good old cagefight….what else do you need. Sounds like a Saturday. No blood on the pony hair loafers, tux remained in tacked, I left with the brilliant woman I sought-after, and the only one at a loss was my poor mink stole we shall call Pierre whom arrived back at the mansion missing his right eye.
Glad I made your evening as I tend to enjoy myself.
MSB clever…
Carry-on…..off the record your maui is on sale this week. Seek and you shall find.
Welcome Mink Stole Boy! Of course we here at DaOiD cannot verify that you are indeed MSB himself, but we take you at your word and thank you for the update on your evening. And yes, a good time was had by all! Now if only we could get rid of this cold…
holy cow (or mink) pork chops…very funny
Indeed it was!
Blake, wherever you go, trouble finds you, doesn’t it? This is almost as interesting as your post on New Year’s Eve in the Emergency Department. As someone who has a mink stole herself, and wears it only on rare occasions, I loved the MSB story, and the possibility that he found your blog post about the fracas.
BTW, I’ve been to the Embrace show, and while there’s a lot there to like, I really don’t get the John McEnroe stuff. They’re pantyhoses filled with sand and coated in tar to make them hold their shape. That’s it. But, as I have written on my blog recently, the current art school aesthetic is in an anti-artistry phase. It’s all about found objects, homey crafts, and “cleverness.”
I didn’t get the John McEnroe stuff so much myself. Or maybe I just didn’t like it. The Communications Director at the DAM claimed that it was one of the most popular exhibits at Embrace — how does one measure such a thing? — but she was also introducing John McEnroe, who spoke at the event as well. To each her own, it would seem…