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Getting In Sync With the Convention
Opening three days before the Republicans' Sept. 1 shindig at the Xcel Energy Center and continuing for a week, CivicFest will have such exhibits as an "Oval Office," where patrons can sign bills into law while posing for souvenir photos; an Air Force One fuselage replica they can tour; live bald eagles; and the White House in Miniature, a spectacular 50-foot-long scale model. (Through Sept. 4, $15 admission for adults, $10 for students, those 60 and older and active military; children younger than 8 free.)
For its part, Denver's Invesco Field will play host to "The American Presidential Experience," a traveling exhibit of memorabilia complete with its own Oval Office and Air Force One fuselage and such offbeat fare as an actual Florida voting machine from 2000 and china table settings from eight presidential administrations (Aug. 22-27, $15 for adults, $10 for those 65 and older and children 2 to 12; http:/
Museums in both cities are getting into the act, of course, and here again the offerings range from the inevitable to the capricious. As to the former, the Minneapolis Institute of Arts is showcasing "Hail to the Chief: Images of the American Presidency," an exhibit of more than 70 works, including such miscellany as Richard Avedon's portrait of Eisenhower and a signed Christmas card from the Kennedy White House (free, through Sept. 21; http:/
Similarly history-minded are two shows focusing on the only other Democratic Convention held in Denver (in 1908, when William Jennings Bryan was nominated a third ill-fated time), at the Denver Public Library (free, through Oct. 31 at the Central Library; http:/
If those are too serious for you, try Denver with its "Dr. Seuss for President" at Gallery One Writer's Square. There you'll find imagery from several of the celebrated author's books with political overtones, including "The Lorax," that thinly veiled screed against environmental devastation; "The Sneetches," Seuss's meditation on discrimination; and "The Cat in the Hat," his wholesale embrace of nonconformity (free, through Sept. 1; http:/
Moving on to that other staple of convention irreverence, the satirical revue, Denver's Bovine Metropolis Theater will play host to "Convention?," where the laughs purportedly will fly when one presidential candidate makes a campaign promise to build an Amazon-to-Texas footbridge (Aug. 20 and 27, $8; http:/
The Brave New Workshop in Minneapolis, meanwhile, will try to generate its own yuks via a salute to the 2008 primary season called, ahem, "The Lion, The Witch and the War Hero; or Is McCain Able?" (Fridays, Saturdays and some Thursdays through Nov. 8, $23-$25; http:/
The looming question, of course, is whether Minneapolis and Denver will be able to share the spotlight generated by the parties' high-wattage candidates during the most important electoral moment in modern American history or whether they'll merely bask in the reflected glow.
Maybe they will if conventioneers take their politics to the streets for Minneapolis's spark24, a daylong barrage of performances celebrating the city's prodigious arts scene on Aug. 30 ( http:/
Which reminds me, I have to go. I'm working on this Ron Paul "End the Fed!" number that will absolutely slay them.
For a list of more convention-related activities in Minneapolis and Denver, visit http:/




