
ACTIVITIES: Open daily, Summer 2026
Visit Maroon Bells
Maroon Bells
Dates of Operation:
May 15, 2026
to
November 1, 2026
Days of the week:
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Hours:
7:00 AM
to
5:00 PM
Art Exhibition - Kerstin Brätsch: Fossil Psychic Stone Mimicry (Aspen)
Aspen Art Museum
Dates of Operation:
May 20, 2026
to
March 31, 2027
Days of the week:
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday
Hours:
10:00 AM
to
6:00 PM
For its summer 2026 rooftop commission, Aspen Art Museum has invited Kerstin Brätsch to develop a site-specific presentation that places artworks in dialogue with elements of the natural world. The installation centers on a new series of four sculptural benches, generated through the artist’s long-standing engagement with traditional craft practices.
Brätsch often incorporates artisanal techniques—including stained glass, marbling, stucco marmo, and, more recently, mosaic—into her process, deploying these enduring traditions as extensions of her painting practice. Her ongoing series of mosaic benches builds upon the artist’s Fossil Psychics (Stucco Marmo) works, in which painterly gestures become bodies of fossilized fragments, as though they are remnants of geological phenomena or ancient creatures.
Kaleidoscopic and suffused with color, the benches are designed to be used by visitors and accommodate living plants within them, forming a vibrant landscape of native flowers and shrubs that will evolve with the changing seasons. In addition to the slopes of Aspen Mountain, they are framed against the backdrop of a new vinyl mural from Brätsch’s MƎTA series. The prismatic, textured expanse is developed from small oil paintings on paper that are scanned and enlarged, their surface marks and brushstrokes transformed into a sprawling digital configuration of painting’s foundational materials.
Expanded and repeated through symmetrical patterns, these images generate Rorschach-like forms that evoke a wide range of associations, from landscapes to ancient frescoes. In Brätsch’s work, the act of looking opens onto a perceptual field that invites viewers to interpret and project their own readings, rather than encounter any singular, fixed meaning.
Visitors are welcome to sit on the benches. Please be cautious as they can become hot when exposed to sunlight for long periods.
Silver Queen Gondola
Aspen Snowmass
Dates of Operation:
May 23, 2026
to
June 6, 2026
Days of the week:
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
Hours:
10:00 AM
to
4:00 PM
Art Exhibition - Arch Connelly: Straighten Your Wig and Pray
Aspen Art Museum
Dates of Operation:
June 12, 2026
to
October 11, 2026
Days of the week:
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday
Hours:
10:00 AM
to
6:00 PM
Silver Queen Gondola
Aspen Snowmass
Dates of Operation:
June 13, 2026
to
September 7, 2026
Days of the week:
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Hours:
10:00 AM
to
4:00 PM
History Exhibition - Aspen in Excess: The 1980's [Small Town, Global Hotspot]
Aspen Historical Society
Dates of Operation:
June 16, 2026
to
April 17, 2027
Days of the week:
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Hours:
12:00 PM
to
5:00 PM
The Wheeler/Stallard house is a Queen Anne style Victorian built around 1887/1888. The first floor of the Museum is interpreted as a Victorian Aspen home and the second floor gallery features rotating exhibitions to explore area history. The house is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and the grounds comprise the Ruth Whyte Park.
Opening June 16th at the Wheeler/Stallard Museum, Aspen Historical Society’s newest – and most rad – exhibition Aspen in Excess: the 1980s explores an infamous decade and a turning point in local history marked by rapid growth, rising wealth, and global attention. The exhibition highlights how ‘80s-era changes in politics and culture–as well as building and tax codes–mirrored national trends and transformed the small ski town, revealing parallels with contemporary culture. Through curated stories, archival photographs, newspaper clippings, and epic playlists, this totally tubular history exhibition will bring the pivotal decade to life, in excess! Join us to relive Aspen in the 1980s, a decade defined by high highs and low lows that shaped the small mountain town into a global hotspot.
Art Exhibition - All That is Close
Red Brick Center for the Arts
Dates of Operation:
June 18, 2026
to
August 1, 2026
Days of the week:
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Hours:
9:00 AM
to
5:00 PM
Elk Camp Gondola
Aspen Snowmass
Dates of Operation:
June 21, 2026
to
September 7, 2026
Days of the week:
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Hours:
10:00 AM
to
5:00 PM
Art Exhibition - Adrián Villar Rojas: First Gods, Lost Animals
Aspen Art Museum
Dates of Operation:
July 2, 2026
to
April 11, 2027
Days of the week:
Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday
Hours:
10:00 AM
to
6:00 PM
Running from July 2 to April 11, 2027, across two floors of the Museum, Adrián Villar Rojas: First Gods, Lost Animals will evoke both the geological and mythological formation of a cave. In Villar Rojas’s approach, the cave functions as a space of double accumulation: geologically shaped through eons of material deposition and mineral consolidation, and culturally layered with human projections, rituals, and symbolic activity.
The exhibition is grounded in the premise that humans, as finite intelligences, confront a universe whose complexity far exceeds their cognitive scale. In this condition, symbolic tools arise—gods, art, mathematics—as adaptive technologies that render the world navigable. These systems extend human cognition across time: mythology operates as an early interpretive scaffold, mathematics formalizes abstraction, and artificial intelligence marks the newest threshold in this lineage, externalizing thought to meet increasing complexity.
Within this environmental transformation sits a new sculpture co-commissioned by the Aspen Art Museum and Audemars Piguet Contemporary, Untitled (from the series The Language of the Enemy), a life-size triceratops skull. Currently on view in Le Brassus (Switzerland) until mid-March 2026, the work imagines a prehistoric meeting between Homo sapiens and Neanderthals as a possible moment when the first gestures of meaning or image-making passed between species. In this new work, Villar Rojas proposes a theoretical history that challenges prevailing anthropocentric narratives of human exceptionalism. While symbolic creation has long been framed as an invention of Homo sapiens, recent findings suggest that Neanderthals may have engaged in such practices before us. Here, the encounter becomes a site of transmission: what we consider the foundation of human culture may have been inherited from a now-vanished branch of the human lineage. In this view, the birth of art is not a triumph of our species but a gift from another.
Adrián Villar Rojas is curated by Claude Adjil, Curator at Large.
Special thanks to Nicola Lees, Christine Navin, Daniel Merritt, Gemma Goette, Kevin Haynie, Simone Krug.
Presenting a new sculpture co-commissioned by the Aspen Art Museum and Audemars Piguet Contemporary.
Aspen Art Museum exhibitions are made possible by the Marx Exhibition Fund.
Support for artists is made possible by the Beckmann Kotzubei Artist Residency Fund.
Major support is provided by Aspen Art Museum Exhibition Circle, with special thanks to Daniel English, Nancy Magoon, H. Gael Neeson, Cecilia and Ernesto Poma, Katie and Amnon Rodan, Allison Rose, Gayle Stoffel, and Mary Zlot.
General exhibition support is provided by the Toby Devan Lewis Visiting Artist Fund. Additional support is provided by Aspen Art Museum National Council.
Art Exhibition: Nearness
Red Brick Center for the Arts
Dates of Operation:
August 13, 2026
to
October 16, 2026
Days of the week:
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
Hours:
9:00 AM
to
5:00 PM
Silver Queen Gondola
Aspen Snowmass
Dates of Operation:
September 11, 2026
to
October 4, 2026
Days of the week:
Friday, Saturday, Sunday
Hours:
10:00 AM
to
4:00 PM

