SAT
JUN 2, 2012


‘Ancestral Modern: Australian Aboriginal Art’

This is not an exhibition of an art form that’s ancient and dead. Australian aboriginal art has been gaining steam and notoriety since the 1970s, and this exhibition will bring several practicing contemporary artists to Seattle along with more than 100 paintings and sculptures from the last 40 years, extending traditions that go back thousands of years. Those who love pretty things to look at will be satisfied; so will those who want to ask, “Why do people make art?” (Seattle Art Museum, 1300 First Ave, www.seattleartmuseum.org, 10 am–5 pm, $17 suggested)

SUN
JUN 3, 2012


Destroyer MUSIC
Destroyer

Dan Bejar, the brains behind Destroyer and a frequent contributor to the New Pornographers, wasn’t gifted with the golden cords of a canary. His voice is frankly creepy. It’s the kind of taut, whispery voice you’d expect to narrate a police lineup of rage-prone clowns, or advise a blind man with a broken cane to look on the bright side. Kaputt, Destroyer’s most recent release, combines the seedy hopefulness of a saxophone with Bejar’s knack for breathless, intelligent lyrics and super-creepster singing. The result is fucking delightful. (Showbox at the Market, 1426 First Ave, www.showboxonline.com, 7 pm, $18 adv/$20 DOS, all ages)

MON
JUN 4, 2012


‘Rent-A-Cat’ SIFF FILM
‘Rent-A-Cat’

A quirky young woman lives in a house with a bunch of cats. She has a pull-cart that she takes out with an array of kitties in baskets, and she uses a megaphone to announce her wares: “Feeling lonely? I’ll rent you a cat.” When someone is interested in a certain one, she visits the person’s home and they end up telling her their dreams and problems and life stories. This lighthearted film is funny and adorable and very Japanese. (Egyptian Theatre, 805 E Pine St, thestranger.com/siff, 9:30 pm, $11)

TUE
JUN 5, 2012


Blind Pig Bistro FOOD & DRINK
Blind Pig Bistro

Late spring—that’s now, people!—is a marvelous season to eat at a Seattle restaurant that has a menu of very-freshest local greatnesses. What’s been on the blackboard at tiny, awesome Blind Pig Bistro recently: chilled radish-top soup. Asparagus with farro, tapenade, arugula, and currants. Fava beans with walnuts, lovage aioli, lemon. There’s meat, too, but right now, vegetables are king: Crown them in your heart by putting them in your stomach. (Also on offer at the Blind Pig: “HUGS—SEE SERVER.”) (Blind Pig Bistro, 2238 Eastlake Ave E, 329-2744, 5–10 pm)

WED
JUN 6, 2012


Nell Freudenberger

Ten years ago, aspiring authors loved to hate Nell Freudenberger. Her books won acclaim and big sales, and she was declared one of the New Yorker’s 20 great writers under 40. It’s the kind of celebrity that inspires the bloggy masses to pounce on any slip in ego or talent. But Freudenberger just kept writing. Her latest novel, The Newlyweds, is about a Bangladeshi woman who moves to New York to marry a man she met on the internet. To some, she’s a mail-order bride. In Freudenberger’s hands, the truth is more complex—and more beautifully told—than that. (Elliott Bay Book Company, 1521 10th Ave, 624-6600, 7 pm, free)

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THU
JUN 7, 2012


It’s Been Good to Know Ya!: The Cafe Racer Benefit

The recent tragedy at Cafe Racer struck at the heart of a wild world of artists—musicians, singers, circus performers, new vaudevillians, burlesque dancers, jug bands—that found a home at the cafe. Tonight’s beauty of a show, subtitled “A Concert, Sing-Along, and Celebration of the Lives of Our Dearly Departed,” features a ton of them—including members of Circus Contraption, God’s Favorite Beefcake, and Orkestar Zirkonium, along with the Can Can Castaways, Fuchsia Foxx, Vince Mira, the Bad Things, and more—with proceeds going to victims and their families. (Neptune Theatre, 1303 NE 45th St, www.stgpresents.org, 8 pm, $15 donation at the door, all ages)



‘Can’t Get There From Here’

This exhibition set in a tall, glowing gallery that seems like a chamber of heaven probes what you want from art: transcendence? Transport? Three large photographs are anchors: A sublime sky over Nevada by Richard Misrach, displayed high like an altarpiece; a portrait of prehistoric underwater life taken at a natural history museum and printed in romanticizing black and white by Hiroshi Sugimoto; and what looks like a field of fog but is glass with potato-chip oil smeared on it by Isaac Layman. Enter the women: Britta Johnson’s wax tomb videos, Amanda Manitach’s ecstatic folds and deferred orgasms, and Serrah Russell’s National Geographic pictures laid on real landscapes. (Lawrimore Project, 117 S Main St, Suite 101, www.lawrimoreproject.com, 11 am–8 pm, free)

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FRI
JUN 8, 2012


The Blind Cafe FOOD & DRINK
The Blind Cafe

It is often said that losing one sense heightens the others, which is precisely the point of the Blind Cafe, a pop-up restaurant conducted entirely in the pitch dark. The taste of your dinner, the sound of the music (by Rosh & One Eye-Glass Broken), and the importance of community come to the fore without the distractions of sight. All of the waitstaff is blind, an impressive feat that makes for an interesting jumping-off point for the evening’s Q&A session. A portion of your ticket supports Seattle’s blind community. (Fremont Baptist Church, 717 N 36th St, www.theblindcafe.com, 7:30 pm, $55–$95 sliding scale)



Swahili MUSIC
Swahili

Swahili hail from Portland, but damn if they don’t sound like a phantasm of some ancient Eastern mystic’s imagination. Powered by ethereal yet visceral chants and tom-tom-heavy beats that open up your root chakra, Swahili’s sound taps into a primal vein of feverish tranquility. Their music exists to help you levitate to higher consciousness through oscillatory drones while elevating your heart rate with mantric rhythms. Tonight is the release party for Swahili’s deep-healing self-titled LP (limited to 300 copies) on Seattle label Translinguistic Other. (Black Lodge, 9 pm)

Also Suggested Today: The Blind CafeSwahili

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