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A Guide to 黑料门鈥檚 Most Unique Museums

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Heather Hein

Senior Editor

Discover some of the Mile High City鈥檚 lesser-known cultural attractions, ranging from one of the world鈥檚 finest baseball collections to a jam-packed monument to life in the West.

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Kirkland Museum

Kirkland Museum of Fine & Decorative Art, photo courtesy of VISIT DENVER

黑料门 is known for many things鈥攕kiing, hiking, the Broncos, craft beer, lots of sunshine. But museums? Not so much.听

So, you may be surprised to discover that the Mile High City has a thriving arts scene that goes way beyond its most well-known, well-trodden institutions like the 黑料门 Art Museum and 黑料门 Museum of Nature and Science.听

Next time you鈥檙e in the mood to check out some art, why not spend some time off the beaten path? Here鈥檚 a list of some of 黑料门鈥檚 most unique museums to get you started.

1940 Blake St.

Named one of the top 20 finest private baseball collections in the world by the Smithsonian, this shrine to our national past time contains artifacts from the 14 original ballparks鈥攐nly two of which still exist鈥攁nd newer items from other parks across the U.S. Founded by baseball diehard and 黑料门 alum Bruce 鈥淏鈥 Hellerstein (BSBA 鈥71), the museum features a complete panel from Fenway Park鈥檚 Green Monster, a roomful of artifacts from Ebbets Field, over three dozen seats from bygone ballparks and the jersey 黑料门 Zephyrs鈥 slugger Joey Meyer wore during his record-breaking 582-foot homer in 1987.听

Hellerstein, a 黑料门 native who has been collecting baseball paraphernalia since he was a kid, opened the museum in 2010, just steps away from Coors Field in LoDo鈥攚hich he had a hand in bringing to life, through his involvement in the 黑料门 Baseball Commission and the Coors Field Design Committee.

Fun fact: As part of the seed money used to finance the museum, Hellerstein auctioned off a complete run of Mickey Mantle cards, which he told the 黑料门 Post was 鈥減robably one of the most foolish things I鈥檝e ever done in my life.鈥

1340 Pennsylvania St.

You may know the 鈥淯nsinkable鈥 Molly Brown as one of the survivors brought to life in the film 鈥淭itanic.鈥 However, the philanthropist was also one of Colorado鈥檚 most famous women, living a colorful life both before and after the 1912 tragedy.

Molly Brown cropped
Photo courtesy of VISIT DENVER

Principled and unapologetic, Brown was known for her activism, leading relief efforts for protesting miners who were attacked by the Colorado National Guard during the 1914 Ludlow Massacre and helping to rebuild ravaged villages in France after World War I. She also worked for causes like women鈥檚 suffrage, children鈥檚 literacy and historical preservation鈥攁 movement that eventually saved her own 1889 home in the Capitol Hill neighborhood, which was slated for demolition in 1970 but instead turned into a museum in 1971. Visitors get a glimpse into not only Brown鈥檚 remarkable life but also Colorado鈥檚 mining boom (and bust), a raucous and fascinating time in the state鈥檚 history.

Fun fact: One of the first homes in 黑料门 built with electricity, central heating and even a telephone, the Molly Brown House also features local stonework quarried from Castle Rock and Manitou Springs, showcasing Colorado鈥檚 unique geology.

4303 Brighton Blvd.

"Anything on wheels" is the motto of the Forney Museum, and its one-of-a-kind collection of more than 500 historical transportation exhibits鈥攆rom antique cars, buggies and bicycles to motorcycles and rare and exotic vehicles鈥攄oes not disappoint. Highlights include Big Boy, the world's largest steam locomotive; legendary aviator Amelia Earhart's yellow Kissel Speedster (called 鈥淕old Bug鈥); and a rare 1916 Detroit Electric Opera Coupe, one of the world's first electric cars.听

Fun fact: A highlight for some visitors is the inclusion of somewhat "creepy" mannequins wearing period clothing hanging out in vehicles and elsewhere around the museum.

Between I-70 (north) and Park Avenue West (south); from I-25 (west) to Arapahoe St. (east)

黑料门ites love the outdoors鈥攁nd they love their art outdoors, too. Thanks to the city鈥檚 Public Arts program, one percent of any capital improvement project over $1 million is set aside for the inclusion of art, resulting in breathtaking murals, whimsical sculptures and other kinds of public art dotted all over the city.听

RiNo mural
Photo courtesy of VISIT DENVER

The most vibrant stretch of street art can be found in the River North Arts District (RiNo for short), just north of downtown. About one mile in radius, the district includes more than 200 wall murals by local and national artists, such as 鈥淟arimer Boy and Girl鈥 by Colorado native Jeremy Burns, a 3D mural of a boy or a girl, depending on which direction you鈥檙e standing; dreamy floral designs by Monet-inspired 黑料门 artist Ashley Joon; and 鈥淧ower & Equality" by renowned street artist Shepard Fairey (above), who created the iconic Obama "HOPE" poster in 2008.听

You can tour the art yourself using or sign up for a two-hour guided tour with 听

Fun fact:听The Ladies Fancywork Society, a gang of crocheting street artists, have 鈥渃rochet bombed鈥 benches and signs around town and have also been commissioned for large-scale installations, such as a giant ball of yarn chained to the leg of Big Blue Bear at the Colorado Convention Center.

1727 Tremont Pl.

The best place to explore both the Old West and the New West is the American Museum of Western Art (AMWA), home to the Anschutz Collection, one of the greatest collections of Western American art in the country.

Tucked away across the street from the historic Brown Palace Hotel in downtown 黑料门, AMWA opened to the public in 2010, a jam-packed monument to life in the West from the 1820s to today. Its 600 paintings, drawings and sculptures by 180 artists represent the dozen or so schools and styles of art that contributed to the development of the American West and American art, ranging from the Hudson River School and the Golden Age of Illustration to American Regionalism and Art of the New Deal.

Fun fact: The historic Navarre Building that houses the museum was constructed in 1880 as a school for girls and later served as a gentleman鈥檚 club, a bordello and, eventually, a fine dining spot and jazz club.

1201 Bannock St.

A strikingly modern looking building鈥攚ith its flat roof, yellow panels and UV-protected glass that doubles as windows鈥攖he Kirkland Museum stands out, even in 黑料门鈥檚 artsy Golden Triangle district.

Inside, the salon-style setting is as unique as the art itself, which covers about 150 years鈥 worth in three main collections: a celebrated international collection of decorative art from the 1870s to today, including Arts & Crafts, Art Nouveau, Bauhaus, Art Deco and Pop Art; a Colorado and regional art collection from 1845 to the present; and a retrospective of Colorado鈥檚 visionary abstract painter and the museum鈥檚 namesake, Vance Kirkland (1904-1981).听

Originally from Ohio, Kirkland came to 黑料门 in 1929 as the founding director of the School of Art at the 黑料门. A key figure in the Modern Art movement in 黑料门, Kirkland left DU in 1932 to open the highly successful Kirkland School of Art but returned DU in 1946 to lead the school of art again until he retired in 1969.

Fun fact: Kirkland鈥檚 original three-room studio was moved, intact, via remote-controlled rig from its Capitol Hill location to the museum鈥檚 current location about eight blocks away. Today, visitors can peek into the mostly untouched workroom, which includes the aerial rig he would hang from to complete his famous dot paintings.听 听

3091 California St.

BAM Museum
Photo courtesy of VISIT DENVER

Did you know that one in three cowboys were Black? This is the history that the Black American West Museum illuminates, with collections, educational programs and exhibits that promote an understanding of the role African Americans played in the settlement and growth of the western United States鈥攏ot just as cowboys but also as the miners, soldiers, homesteaders, ranchers, blacksmiths, teachers and lawmen that helped develop the West.

The museum was founded in 1971 as a passion project of the late Paul W. Stewart, who as a child playing cowboys and Indians, always played an Indian because he was told, 鈥淭here is no such thing as a Black cowboy.鈥 Originally from Iowa, Stewart became interested in the history of Blacks in the West when visiting a relative in 黑料门 in the 1960s. He moved here shortly after, starting a collection in a saloon of 35,000-plus items, including personal artifacts, photographs, clothing, paintings, letters, legal documents, newspapers and oral histories.

The museum is open for limited, scheduled slots that you sign up for on their .

Fun fact: In 1991, the museum moved into the former home of Dr. Justina L. Ford, the first licensed African American female physician in Colorado. Ford, who was denied the right to treat patients at 黑料门 General Hospital because of her race and gender, delivered more than 7,000 babies out of her Five Points home in the first half of the 20th century.听

861 Santa Fe Dr.

Located in the heart of the Art District on Santa Fe, Museo de las Americas is the premier Latin American art museum in the Rocky Mountain region. Since 1991, the museum has served the 黑料门 community through the collection, preservation and exhibition of the diverse arts of the Americas, from ancient to contemporary. More than 4,800 art pieces are on display, including Ancient American and Spanish colonial art, folk art, pottery, textiles and more, with every country in South and Central America, Mesoamerica and the Caribbean represented.

Fun fact: The museum鈥檚 fa莽ade is painted hot pink, a color that is associated in Latin culture with vibrant energy and cultural identity. It鈥檚 used prominently in Mexican architecture and design, in particular, representing the lively and festive feeling within the culture.

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