Earlier this month, Mutual Terrain opened at RedLine—our featured exhibition for the 2025 Denver Month of Video (MOV)—and Westword took notice.
Curated by RedLine Resident Alumni Jenna Maurice, alongside Adán De La Garza, Mutual Terrain brings together 6 international artists, with films that explore personal, spiritual, and political relationships to land through video.
The exhibition is part of Denver MOV’s month-long citywide takeover of screens and spaces, showcasing the power of time-based media.
In their recent article, Westword featured RedLine as a key venue in MOV’s expansive programming and highlighted the return of Maurice, a former RedLine resident artist, to the space:
““I was a resident artist [at RedLine] for two years during the first MOV, so getting to come back with this kind of vision feels really full circle....It’s one of those projects where we get to transform a space we know well into something entirely different.””
With installations ranging from downtown billboards to immersive screenings, Westword praised MOV’s ambition and named Mutual Terrain among the exhibitions pushing the boundaries of what video art can communicate, blending intimate storytelling with global themes.
Now in its second edition, Denver MOV aims to bring video art directly into people’s daily lives, making it as accessible as murals or photography.
Read the full Westword article about Mutual Terrain here >
Experience Mutual Terrain at RedLine
Mutual Terrain brings together works that examine the deep entanglements between human life and the natural world.
Through imagery, memory, and place-based reflection, this exhibition explores the land not as a passive backdrop but as an active, animate force—one that remembers, resists, and collaborates.
On display through August 3, 2025.