15 APRIL 16-22, 2026 westword.com WESTWORD | CONTENTS | LETTERS | NIGHT+DAY | CULTURE | CAFE | MUSIC | BOULDERTHEATER.COM FOXTHEATRE.COM APR 16 APR 18 APR 20 APR 17 APR 19 APR 23 BIG PINCH ON THE DOT, SURPRISE SOUP PETE YORN (SOLO ACOUSTIC) CANNABUFFS X 420 ABERNATHY SHAGNASTER, YOUNG AND DEAD, SOMETHING ELECTRIC LETS GET SHREKXUAL: A PARODY BURLESQUE PHONEBOY HEART ATTACK MAN, SLOW JOY, PONY NETHER HOUR JUST ANNOUNCED MAY 19 ...................................................... INDIGO GIRLS JUN 13 ...........................................................LEE HARRIS JUN 19 .......................................TOMMY EMMANUEL, CGP JUL 11 ..........DON WAS AND THE PAN-DETROIT ENSEMBLE JUST ANNOUNCED JUL 24 .........................................................JUNGLEFOWL AUG 20 .......................................................WAX MONKEY SEPT 23 ..........................................................THE BENDS NOV 7 ...............................LOUD WOMEN FEST COLORADO APR 25 APR 28 MAY5 APR 20 APR 24 APR 19 APR 17 MAY1 BEN HARPER & THE INNOCENT CRIMINALS NIGHT 2 SOLD OUT AFI CHOIR BOY JANEANE GAROFALO JOHN NOVOSAD BUCKETHEAD OH WONDER WRABEL NPR’S PLANET MONEY EARLYBIRDS CLUB HAIL THE SUN FOXY SHAZAM, LADY RADIATOR, RESILIA APR 24 THRU Call Elaine Lustig, PhD .......................................................... at 303-369-7770 Needing Your Emotional ....... Animal W/ You? For eligible people who need their emotional support animal to accompany them at/or away from home, I am available to provide the documentation and counseling. CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED we would just be like the internet or like a snowball rolling down a mountain, and we would pick up communities every time we went to Venice, Chicago, upstate New York, or to other places we’ve gone to,” she says. “In truth, we do pick up audiences there, but we’ve learned there is a reason to have a geographic sort of center.” That realization has reshaped how Stell thinks about Black Cube’s role locally. “Why not really invest in that commu- nity?” she asks. “Even though we’re leaning into our Englewood space, Black Cube is still a very unique niche. We do much more experimental, large-scale exhibitions than other contemporary art institutions in town. We don’t run a regular program of three to eight exhibitions a year. Instead, we’ll do one exhibition that’s a chunk of the year, leave it up a very long time, and invest some money and time in something that’s really ambitious and experimental and relates to context and site.” Even so, the organization remains in- tentionally small, operating with a four- person team and a structure designed to stay fl exible. That nimbleness, Stell says, is essential to continuing the kind of ambitious, site-specifi c work that defi nes Black Cube. “It’s always an uphill battle,” she says. “But I’m very excited to continue to pursue multiple directions at once. It’s never busi- ness as usual. Black Cube is a very expansive, curious organization, so I enjoy collaborating with artists in ways that allow the organiza- tion to dig deep into community and think critically about our world while also encour- aging audiences’ curiosity.” After more than a decade of building projects of vastly different scales in vastly different places, Stell says, the thread con- necting Black Cube’s projects is not location but how people engage with them. The aim is to create environments where audiences feel open to asking questions and exploring unfamiliar ideas. “We’re so siloed and divided and infor- mation-overloaded in our society,” Stell concludes. “When you can create environ- ments that support curiosity, people become more open. The older I get and the longer I do this, that is such a guiding star.” Talk With Your Mouth Full potluck brunches are Sunday, April 26, May 3 and May 17 at Black Cube, 2925 South Umatilla Street, Englewood. RSVP and learn more about other events at blackcube.art. Molly Berger’s “Mementos/Monument,” in Gold Hill, 2016. PHOTO BY SARA FORD Culture continued from page 14